03.19.07

Final things

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Artefact), IDAT101 (Interstices), IDAT101 (Mapping) at 6:21 pm by ollieidat

Mapping

My final map animation: http://www.oholmwood.com/stuff/digitalmap.swf

And a video that Kat and Claudia have made about a nifty expanding fibre-optics variation of the kind of thing I’ve done in my map: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bh1_LO1akQg

In my animated map, the different colours represent different stages along the chain mail. If you hover over the points, the names of the places will pop up as a guide. Dashed lines represent travel overseas and are to a different scale to the complete lines.

Interstices

My BBC news page, set in the year 2037 (isn’t it funny how BBC news haven’t changed their website layout and style at all in 30 years?.. hmm..) http://www.oholmwood.com/stuff/bbcnews.html The article talks about the new teleportation technology emerging at that time, and while it hasn’t yet had an impact on much, it discusses the possible ways in which it could affect things socially, environmentally and economically, all based on the ideas Claudia and I discussed.

Her Sun newspaper stuff, set in the year 2106, talks about what has gone wrong, raising similar issues to mine, and can be found at the bottom of this page in her lovely blog.

Artefact

To add to the previous blog post, here’s a photo of an A4 printout of my artefact that I got today:

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I did want an A3 one, but for some technical reasons, it wasn’t possible for the printing people to do it for me. Oh well, it’s on nice shiny photo quality paper and I can at least see the point about getting all the details in on the printout, rather than sticking with a resized on-screen jpeg. It goes some way to achieving what Satoshi Matsuyama lives by.

03.17.07

Final dollop of mapping work

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 2:23 pm by ollieidat

Dollop.. nice word that, isn’t it? I should use it more often.

So it’s all kicking off for the mapping project this weekend. I’m not around, as I’ve buggered off home until Sunday, so we can’t work on anything as a complete group, but we met on Friday and discussed our plan of attack. We’re going for two maps, one digital, one based on paper, and I’ll be taking on the digital one while the girls will sort something out for the paper-based one. I think they’re going to print out a large UK map from digimap on some sheets of A4, and pinpoint all of the inidividual email recipients and utilise a kind of thermal imaging system, where the most popular areas such as Plymouth and Essex will be hottest, and places like Bristol and Norwich will be cooler to certain amounts. I think that map will be less concerned about linking people up along the chains, but I’m not sure yet. I did hear talk of the use of strings and stuff.

My digital map, which will be made into a flash animation, is less concerned about pinpointing exact locations on a map, although distance is measured, the chains are illustrated in more of a branching tree style of doing things, similar to how maps of the internet are presented. I looked at Cyber Geography and found images like these quite interesting..

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Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

And particularly the kind of stuff on this site.

They’re maps of cyberspace, as messages travel through servers and things, and that’s sort of what my map will be presenting. Here’s a Photoshop image of what I have so far, and I’ll make this into a snazzy Flash animation this afternoon…

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The seven stages that our replies extended to are colour coded, starting from red into purple, blue, green, yellow, etc. Stage 1, which is us four group members, extends out from the central point towards the four corners, and this is a bit like the seperation of people or ideas in a family tree or brainstorm diagram. Our following chains will extend out seperately into the four corners of the image, even if say I have someone from Bristol in my chain and Vicky has someone in Bristol on hers, they don’t appear in the exact same spot on the map because it’s more concerned with how the chains branch out and separate. It does however, vaguely measure distance, as the solid lines relate to how far the email has travelled across the country to appear in that persons inbox. The occasional deviancy of the lines as they take sudden turns on their route to the next person represents the different servers and junctions the electronic signals are changing at, in order to get there. It’s by no means completely accurate, but adds to the whole digital, cyberspace style thing, and makes it more interesting to look at, if nothing else. The dashed lines represent travel across countries, as we had a few responses from places like New York and Prague, and purely to make it easier to view, their distance is not to the same scale as the solid, UK lines are.

It’s quite abstract, which is what I think we’re supposed to come up with. I’ll see what my fellow group members think about it, and as I say, I’ll adapt it into a Flash animation with growing lines and maybe rollover places names to make it easier to see which point is which.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us For good measure, here’s some workbook stuff, including notes we made about linking people up and a rough idea I sketched out for my flash map.

03.13.07

Mapping Results

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 10:11 pm by ollieidat

Our email mapping project, where we’ve been receiving responses all week about the chain email we sent out last monday, has been going well. We made the “closing date” yesterday and got a total of 36 responses within the week, so that’s pretty good. Now we have one more week to sort through the data and create a map, maybe two actually, about it.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us Our email responses.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us The contents of a response.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us A table of all of the locations of everyone who responded, plus the location of the person they recieved the email from.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us Some thinking I did about how the map might look.

Yesterday, we looked at the results together, and made a list of everyone’s location and the location of the person who sent them the email. Using the stage numbers they filled in, it was possible to link up some people fairly easily, which Claudia and I attempted to do today, but there are many people for whom it’s going to be really hard to link up, as can be seen in the spreadsheet above, put together by Kat. There are an awful lot of Plymouth’s and in many cases, people haven’t been specific enough about the locations, so it’s impossible to know for sure who sent it where, for some. Particularly in the later stages. Perhaps this is a fault with how we organised it, and might have been better if we risked breaking fairly invisible confidentiality concerns and asked for emails, so we could at least link them better. Still, we’re pleased with the amount of responses we’ve receieved.

We’ve been discussing how we’re going to present it and we seem to be going for two alternate maps. One based in Flash that shows a branching series of lines, depicting the chains that reach out to different areas of the country, colour coded according to the stages, much like some depictions of the internet. Another is an actual, physical map of the country,  probably Digimap printouts, using pins and strings and stuff to mark out the locations. Not sure about that one, but we’ll discuss more soon, and start to build it.

03.05.07

Mapping email: Sent

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 9:26 pm by ollieidat

We finally sent off the first emails for our mapping project today, after finalising the contents of them, which read thusly;

“Hi,

We’re students in Plymouth University, and we have a project that we were hoping you could help us out with. Basically all you have to do is visit this website, fill in the form, and pass this e-mail on to at least five friends.
We know we all hate chain mails but this would really help us out.

The site is http://www.oholmwood.com/mapping

Thank you for your time.”

With the website all set up and the form able to email its contents to us, we’re now ready to send it off and see where it goes. The first stage is the four of us, and the email has been sent off to our respective addresses, and we’re now each going to forward it on to five people, who, being our friends, should be helpful and forward it on to five of their friends. From then on, it’s anyone’s guess how many responses we’ll get back, but whatever happens, I’m sure we’ll find ways of working with our results. How we’re going to map them all out though is the hard part.

If things are a bit quiet for this week, we’ll try the alternative method and have a new email that’s passed on to as many people as humanly possible, not worry about linking up the senders and recievers, and just get back as many locations as possible.

02.25.07

Mapping webpages

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 6:34 pm by ollieidat

In the hope of getting things moving, this weekend I went ahead and pretty much built up the webpage aspect of our mapping project; the site which recipients of our chain email will be directed to, and they are asked to fill in a short form, which is then sent to an email address so we can find out roughly where they are located, without them having to disclose these details to other people in the chain, etc.

I was going to purchase some web space of my own for other personal projects anyway, so now seemed a good time to do so so that we could also use it for this project. On Thursday we agreed that it might be a good idea to send out two different chain emails. One on a smaller scale, which required sufficient details that we could actually link specific senders to recievers and construct the chains, and another that simply asks for the person’s location, and allows them to send the email to as many people as they want. This one will measure how the email spreads across the country over time. As we can’t be certain how many responses we’ll get back, it does seem like a good idea to try both ideas and see what works best, or maybe use both in the end.

The webpages are now online here and here respectively. Don’t submit anything though please, as you might screw up our results! After running through a bit of form validation in javascript, a nifty formmail cgi (or something like that) script already on the server sends off the results to an email address under my domain, which in turn forwards it to our group email address set up for this project, idatstudents@hotmail.co.uk which we can all access. The date on the emails that we recieve there will indicate when the forms were filled in. We can then gather all this data and present it on a map of some sort.

I guess I got a bit carried away with it though. I wanted to get it all ready and working perfectly in time for Monday so that we just needed to fine tune it according to group decisions, and then compose the email together and get things going, because until now it’s all just been theoretical. I should have let my fellow team members know a little more about what I was doing though, and when I showed them what I had done in an MSN conversation earlier today, Vicky and Kat were, understandably, a bit upset that I had decided to go ahead and do it by myself, and we found that not everyone was clear on certain aspects of what we were doing. I take responsibility for that and apologised, but we agreed now that we would ensure everyone is kept perfectly up to date with what’s going on in the project and knew exactly what each member was doing if they had to do individual work. I think we’ll produce some better quality stuff as a result.

Sorry, guys! Won’t happen again. :(

02.20.07

More email mapping

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 3:24 pm by ollieidat

We’re a little clearer on what we’re doing now with our email mapping project, and Mike seems to like it. Essentially, we’re going to send out an email just to one person (or possibly five). That email will contain a URL to a small page we’ll put up, and instructions to forward the email to five of their closest friends, so we create a chain email that spreads out across many different people. The URL will contain a short form which participants will have to fill out and submit to our email address so we can track them, including where they live, and where the person who sent them the email lives (in order to identify who is linked to whom). A number will also be written in the email, which identifies the stage at which the person is in along the chain, so it’ll be 1 when we first send it. When they forward the email, they need to add 1 to that number, and the form will also allow them to tell us which number is written in the email they recieved.

From all this information, we can determine exactly where the email goes across the country, and by combining the stage number and sender location for each recipient, we can link people together. There are a few problems, mainly regarding how likely people will want to respond to us, so we need to keep the things we’re asking them to do to an absolute minimum. Secondly, we’re identifying people by where they live (only as far as city or district) in order to ensure privacy of their information, and not asking them to give us names or email addresses. If multiple people in a single stage live in the same place, it’s going to be alot harder to determine which one sent it to certain people in the following stage. We may also get joke responses and plenty of cases where the chain goes dead, but the further out it goes, the more people will read it, so this balances out the fact that they’ll be more likely to ignore it as they won’t know us.

As far as actually mapping it out goes, we haven’t really decided yet. We could use google maps or another free mapping site that allows you to place markers in specfic places, so we could gradually build it up, or use an actual, physical map.

02.16.07

Mapping emails

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 6:52 pm by ollieidat

I was away for a few days this week for a funeral, and in my absence my fellow group members have gone ahead and discussed things to do with the mapping project without me. So I could say we, but the truth is they decided that mapping the exchanges between people of a £5 note was prone to several things that would make it difficult for us to recieve enough results for. Within the month and a half we have to do this, the fiver may not necessarily be exchanged often enough, as it’ll spend much time in the posession of shops before being given out as change, and probably won’t go very far across the country. Furthermore, people not trusting the URL that’s written on it, or ignoring it, or not being able or bothered to go to the site are all likely things that could happen for each person who gets it. I agree with all of that, but I reckon it could still be quite fun to do, and it doesn’t really matter so much what we get back; the concept is the important thing, which I really like.

The girls have come up with another idea though that is simpler, and is much more likely to get us some results. Maybe I’ll try that £5 note idea myself sometime then. Anyway, as far as I can gather, we’re going to send out an email to everyone we know, asking them to forward it to as many people as possible, and it gets sent on as a chain letter. In the email, we add a URL that takes each recipient to a small form, and they can tell us where they are in the country and maybe any other stats we could use. It’ll be hard to find out, and then work out some sort of system that shows who sent it to who else and where everyone is in the chain if the numbers of people amount to hundreds and hundreds, but I reckon time is quite a good identifier of this, assuming people check their emails on a near daily basis. On a map, it could be interesting to see at what points in time the email emerges in particular areas of the country. This could be possible if you identify each person with a marker that’s coloured according to the day on which we recieved their response on the site. Mike suggested we could use Google Maps or some sort of mapping site, as the way in which it’s presented isn’t as important as the actual concept. Whatever we use, it’ll have to allow us to place markers in a variety of colours, or at least some way of easily showing the day in which each person receieved the email.

In an MSN conversation with Vicky this afternoon, I suggested the idea of creating a boundary in that each person is only allowed to pass the email on to people they know who live locally. This should create a slowly expanding circle around Plymouth, where the later on in the experiment you receieve the email, the further away from Plymouth you’re likely to be. This simulates any object that can be personally passed between individuals, so we’re no longer really mapping the geographical progress of an email but how posession of an object slowly spreads out in an area. Eventually, we agreed it was better to remove this boundary and let people send it to whoever they want around the country, predicting that these kind of circles would naturally emerge around cities and particular places anyway, because most people will have plenty of local friends that they would send it to, without really needing that boundary to ensure they do so. Its removal allows it to spread to any number of other places in the country, allowing more “circles” to emerge. Or we could just end up with a massive array of dots across the whole country, all differently coloured, with no correlation whatsoever. But even if that were the case, it would still be pretty interesting to find that that’s actually what happened, compared to this prediction. All a bit complex at the moment, but we’ll sort it all out on Monday.

We also briefly discussed site hosting and technical bits. It’ll be a simple form in which people can tell us where they are, as specifically as they want to divulge. This is sent to an email address that we’ll set up and we can find out the day and time they recieved the chain email by reading the date on the email that the form sent to us. Of course, that’s prone to the person not checking their emails daily, or not responding immediately, but if we keep the whole process simple enough, I think it’ll be fairly accurate. We could go with a free site host, but I was planning on buying some personal webspace soon anyway, so we could use that, which would be more reliable. Don’t know if I want my domain name passed around to everyone though so I guess we could get a cheap domain name just for this project and apply it to a directory within the site. We’ll see.

02.12.07

Mapping Project re-invented

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Mapping) at 4:54 pm by ollieidat

Fresh off of one of Mike’s tutorial sessions, our mapping project has been given a thorough re-thinking, and I think we’re onto a much better idea now.

It’s very much the same concept; tracking the routes of objects, such as coins, that get passed from person to person across the country, but instead of using a completely hypothetical coin and making up a journey for it, we track actual objects. We thought about doing this before but decided it would be too hard to do so, without really exploring it much, to be honest. We discussed several ideas in the tutorial today though, including creating a small website that outlines what we’re doing and presents the user with a short form to fill in. We write the URL on the object, a five pound note for example, and they use the form to tell us where they are and where they got it from, and we can plot their locations on a map, creating a real route for the object to have travelled to, based on what people tell us.

To ensure we get as much bask as possible, we can use multiple objects, and other possibilities we discussed include pens, balloons, seats on a bus.. we could use anything that gets passed around alot, and can be written on. There are lots more to be considered, such as how likely someone would be to trust a strange URL and not believe it to contain viruses or something offensive, and measures to keep their privacy safe, but I really like this idea in general, and think it’s alot more interesting than what we were going to do.

02.07.07

Progress

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Artefact), IDAT101 (Mapping) at 12:06 pm by ollieidat

The mapping project.. on Monday, we went to the cartography department in Davy building to borrow a couple of maps for use in our presentation next week, where we’ll be showing our idea in an incomplete manner. We can’t use them for the final thing, but we’ll either scan them, or print out the maps from digimap, which we’ve been given instructions for how to access. I don’t think we’re entirely sure yet on how we want to present the journey of an insignificant penny throughout the country as it changes hands from one owner to another. We’ve been throwing around the ideas of creating a narrative about the circumstances of each exchange, sticking actual pennies on the maps with blu-tack at each point and overlaying it with ascitate adorned with drawn arrows to indicate their order. Kat suggested we throw a ball covered in paint across the map to create a random path for us, but that could get messy, although it does effectively convey the idea that where the penny ends up is all quite random. Looking at some of the pennies I’ve unintentionally gathered on my shelf, I see that some of them have been in circulation throughout the country for 15 years or more, going by the years marked on them, so I’m trying to think of a way of mapping time between exchanges, aswell as distances. The only thing I’ve come up with so far is the colour of the arrows that we’re drawing on top of the map. Maybe blue arrows for earlier exchanges, and red ones for more recent ones, or a different colour for each year.

We’ve got a map of Plymouth and a map of Great Britain and we aim to use both, perhaps starting the journey in Plymouth, then moving to the whole country. I was thinking we’d have one on each side of a piece of card, and overlay everything on top – possibly gradually, as part of the presentation.

Mapping Project Workbook Stuff #3 Mapping Project - Borrowed maps

On the artefact front I.. haven’t done much yet really, but I have decided on what particular piece of art I want to mimic. I’m going with Satoshi Matsuyama, who creates massive, very colourful digital photo montages that illustrate an idealised scene based on loads of actual photos. Most of them are quite tropical looking scenes, so I’ve chosen something that I reckon I can put together using photos of things that I can get access to fairly easily. I have quite a few photos of some stuff, particularly trees and foliage, from previous projects, so I should be alright for that.

The image in question is third from the top on this page: http://www.love-peace-happiness.com/page/works/works_01.html

Not his best work certainly, but pretty much the only one of his I can really do!

01.24.07

Pretty Pictures

Posted in IDAT101, IDAT101 (Artefact), IDAT101 (Mapping), Uncategorized at 4:09 pm by ollieidat

After encouragement from Mike on Monday for everyone to get working away on their blogs, I thought I’d better stick up a few pictures to make me look busy.

Telematic workbook stuff #1 Telematic workbook stuff #2 Mapping Project workbook stuff #1 Mapping Project workbook stuff #2 London Trip Photo Montage

On the mapping project, Kat and I are now working with Claudia and Vicky again, after it’s been confirmed this is a different project to the original one last term. We’re still going with my coin tracking idea at the moment and Vicky and I discussed some ideas via the wonders of MSN on Monday. Can’t remember any of them of course, but I’m sure they were great.

For my Artifact project, I’m currently going for the photographic work of Satoshi Matsuyama, over at http://www.love-peace-happiness.com . I really like the amazingly colourful and idealised worlds he creates using tonnes of different photos, and I reckon I could replicate one of his simpler ones, but he does tend to work extremely high res, which might be a problem. Still might look elsewhere for another artist, but he’s the one I’m sticking with for the moment.

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