QIK REPORTS 20,000 views of pocket media video clips that I've uploaded to Qik.com/topgold and in the 18 months and 100 comments that have elapsed since I download Qik onto my Nokia E90, I've learned some things about making pocket media that will be shared on our BSc in Creative Multimedia at Tipperary Institute. Many of these tips come from people who have made their living writing, recording, producing and syndicating rich media for their careers. Along with Mike Kiely, I'm writing the core elements of my Qik experience into a curriculum guide that will serve as the foundation of Business Video Fundamentals, a short course we'll run for anyone interested in spending a weekend in South Tipperary. I used to be a guy who was happy with the written word, until I watched how engrossed our 18-month-old daughter got while watching short 90-second clips of herself, her extended family and her environment. I can tell that she wants to make Qik clips too and I'm getting a pint-sized classroom set up with a throwaway cameraphone that she can use when making clips from her buggy.
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ANOTHER MONTH HAS PASSED as I travel around several events in Europe without my laptop. I'm using the little keyboard at left. Over the years, I've become smart enough to figure out how to shrink my portable computer so that it fits in my pocket. I've also discovered that personal media is just that--people personally decide what works best for them and who am I to impose my values? Nonetheless, gadget lovers have never had it so good. They can choose between the Palm Pre, the Blackberry Storm, the Nokia N97, the iPhone 3G S, an HTC Touch Pro 2, the SonyEricsson Satio, a wide assortment of netbooks, tablets, Android phones and more technology in a segment of devices I have just seen but not touched. People are buying this mobile internet technology (often called mobile internet devices, or Mids) during the current recession because this assortment of kit offers exceptional value for money.
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THE FRONT PAGE of the Irish Times has a shot of an iPhone with "Twittergate" emblazoned over it with the teaser "How the Leaving Cert leak spread on the net" (see below). Inside the paper, Paul Cullen writes, "The rescheduling of English Paper 2 would not have been required but for high-tech tools." [1] That conclusion overstretches the mark. The test would not required rescheduling if normal protocols were followed when invigilators realised they had distributed the incorrect exam. I supervise invigilators and those specialists know the immediate actions that must occur whenever exams are compromised. If you see a compromise, you stop everything and upchannel the incident. That didn't happen and the exam supervisor has been suspended. Because no one admitted the error, too much time elapsed and that prevented the State Exam Commission (SEC) from distributing a back-up exam.
Continue reading "State Examinations Commission Needs Media Monitoring Training" »
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