[kepler-dev] Tutorials and Demos
Laura L. Downey
ldowney at lternet.edu
Fri Apr 6 14:50:53 PDT 2007
We have Camtasia here at UNM which will make movies in various formats so
Deana will have access to that. We specifically got it so we could make
CBTs (computer based training), and demos and tutorials. I think Samantha
did a bit with it but I don't know how much.
Laura L. Downey
Senior Usability Engineer
LTER Network Office
Department of Biology, MSC03 2020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
505.277.3157 office
505.610.9657 mobile
505.277-2541 fax
ldowney at lternet.edu
_____
From: kepler-dev-bounces at ecoinformatics.org
[mailto:kepler-dev-bounces at ecoinformatics.org] On Behalf Of Ilkay Altintas
Sent: Friday, April 06, 2007 2:36 PM
To: Glen Jarvis
Cc: kepler-dev at ecoinformatics.org
Subject: Re: [kepler-dev] Tutorials and Demos
Hi Glen,
These clips are very nice. I'm looking forward to what you will generate for
Kepler.
Which Flash tool are you using?
Cheers,
-ilkay
On Apr 6, 2007, at 12:14 AM, Glen Jarvis wrote:
Deana,
Here are four small clips from a video that I had done on a
project very similar to Kepler. The original format was stored in high
definition and exported to create a DVD. We also created streaming
Quicktime Web videos. I have roughly translated them to Media Player
and Flash in case you don't have Media player installed.
I've done some background work and found a good Flash editing tool
that will let me do the same type of editing I did for these, but in a
very compact and efficient flash format. The flash file included below
is rough at best because of the very "bloated" files I used as
originals. I can create much more streamlined Flash videos given
additional time.
1 of 4: Front Matter:
QuickTime: http://glenjarvis.com/FrontMatter.mov (preferred)
MediaPlayer: http://glenjarvis.com/FrontMatter.wmv
This is the basic "front matter" from the video. Quite a bit is
lost in the web format including voice quality and the richness of the
"cube" effects. Obviously a different, but similar approach could be
done for Flash.
2 of 4: Genbank Blocks:
QuickTime: http://glenjarvis.com/GenbankBlocks.mov (preferred)
MediaPlayer: http://glenjarvis.com/GenbankBlocks.wmv
This video was a hypothetical software package that would do what
Kepler does. Several workflow environments were analyzed in this
video, and this analysis is what would happen if Lego Mindstorm(R)
programming (for children) could be adapted.
3 of 4: Child's Play
QuickTime: http://glenjarvis.com/Childsplay.mov (preferred)
MediaPlayer: http://glenjarvis.com/Childsplay.wmv
The Lego Mindstorm(R) programming that was done was downloaded and
run on this robot. And, we see the robot take to his programming and
"sting his host." It's a fun clip.
4 of 4: Apple Automator
QuickTime: http://www.glenjarvis.com/AppleAutomator.mov (preferred)
MediaPlayer: http://www.glenjarvis.com/AppleAutomator.wmv
Apple does interfaces very well. It's a shame that they are often
so limited to just the Apple platform. As another "alternative"
considered to the workflows we were trying to produce, we considered
the Apple platform for a quick fix (until a more advanced platform
could be created). This was before we realized that Kepler was out
there and is perfect for what we want to do.
Bonus: Flash Translation with Quizzes
Kepler Flash: http://www.glenjarvis.com/KeplerFlash
I spent some time trying to migrate these four videos to Flash.
However, it seems that the "migration" idea is flawed. There are huge
performance bottlenecks that would not be fixed until the videos were
completely "re-storyboarded" from scratch using a Flash tool.
Please forgive this version - it's rough at best. There are now
dead links, and other problems (including streaming performance). I am
sure I could have done a much better job on this - but I want to just
demonstrate the idea. With this platform, we can be much more
interactive, ask quizzes, have them graded, etc. We could even have
photos of examples that would continue when the user clicked on the
appropriate button to either run the example, etc. A lot could be done
with this. Again, I apologize it's this rough. You'll probably have to
pause the video quite a bit until it loads and then play to continue
through the samples.
As rough as these examples are, I think you'll agree it's a good
springboard of where to go and a bit further than where we are now.
Warmest Regards,
Glen Jarvis
--
913-486-8775
glen at glenjarvis.com
http://www.glenjarvis.com
"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." -M. Gandhi
This is great! Yes, we did a little bit with movies, but it was a rather
half-hearted attempt because Kepler was not very far along and we knew it
was
going to change dramatically. Send me your examples -- I'd be happy to work
with you getting some more of these.
Not pressing - I'm in a meeting this week and probably won't start working
on
this until late next week. So perhaps I'll have a set of workflows ready to
send you when you have the time in a few weeks.
Deana
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--
Ilkay ALTINTAS
Lab Director, Scientific Workflow Automation Technologies (SWAT)
San Diego Supercomputer Center(SDSC), UCSD
9500 Gilman Drive, MC: 0505 La Jolla, CA 92093-0505
phone: (858) 822-5453 fax: (858) 534-8303
web: <http://users.sdsc.edu/%7Ealtintas> http://users.sdsc.edu/~altintas
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