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Published byRichard Holmes Modified over 9 years ago
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BY Najmul Hassan Acknowledgement to Mr. Imran Ihsan
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Name: Najmul Hassan 3 Years of Research and Teaching Experience MS Multimedia Communications – M.A.J.U. (2010) Ph.D WS Networks – M.A.J.U. (Currently Enrolled) Email: sardarnajam@yahoo.comsardarnajam@yahoo.com
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Course Name – Multimedia technologies Credit Hour – 03 How this course will proceed – Stream 1: Lectures will be delivered. Assignments, Quizzes, Exams – Book: Digital Multimedia By: Nigel Chapman and Jenny Chapman – Stream 2: Practical Assignments will be given Tools will be introduced and Tutorials may be scheduled (on demand) – Tools: Macromedia Products, Adobe Products, Corel Products, Discreet Products
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Multimedia is a computer-based interactive communications process that incorporates text, graphics, sound, animation, and video The shared digital representation that combines different media together can be loosely called Multimedia
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Interactivity – That goes beyond the simple control offered by VCR – Where you can change the story by altering the events that occur – Where you can choose to have transcription if there is hearing impairment – Where you can choose to hear what is written if you have impaired vision Forensic Multimedia – Where jury members can examine the events from different angle Entertainment – Games | Starship Titanic, Doom and its bloody off springs, Prince of Persia – Movies | … Education – Cinemania, Encyclopedia, Britannica – CBTs : Computer Based Trainings – Simulations
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How to represent a particular data, information etc.. Pie Charts / Bar Charts generated from a spreadsheet Three Dimensional Data Representations Time Varying Presentations for complex dynamic systems – Atmospheric dynamic to represent a tropical storm Linear or Non Linear Behaviors – TV Programs – Block Buster Movies – Web Sites Creativity – Target Audience – Keen Observations – Lots of exposure to similar area – In‐depth Analysis – Re Creation in a better way – Open to Criticism
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Online Delivery – Uses a network to send information from computer, often server machine providing centralized storage of bulky data, to another, usually a personal computer on somebody’s desk. – The network can be LAN, Internet (World Wide Web) Offline Delivery – Uses some removable storage medium – CD ROMs / DVDs
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Making of Multimedia requires software not only for preparation of individual media elements, but for their integration into finished production. Authoring Systems – Programs that allow a designer to assemble different media elements in space and time, and add interactive behavior to them. – These systems interpret user actions and commands in a non‐trivial ways in order to translate the mode of working that is natural to designer. Story Boards – Mean of making and communicating multimedia designs. – Used in large animation studios, and by music videos and advertisement producers, to plan the construction of a piece of work, and to communicate its structure among the team producing it. – A sequence of still picture showing the composition of shots at key points in production. – So it plans the work, which can be used to organize its subsequent development. – Linear in behavior like a comic strip.
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Initial Story Board
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After Multimedia Production
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What do call a mixture of media under software control? Multimedia Production – Where the display and presentation of media elements is a sole purpose – Web Page or an encyclopedia on CD‐ROM Multimedia Application – Where the display of the multimedia is more intimately bound up with computation
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Means by which choices can be presented to users can vary enormously. Menus, Dialog Boxes, Outlined Buttons and so on…
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1945 ‐ Vannevar Bush (1890‐1974) wrote about Memex 1960s ‐ Ted Nelson started Xanadu project 1967 ‐ Nicholas Negroponte formed the Architecture Machine Group at MIT 1968 ‐ Douglas Engelbart demonstrated NLS system at SRI 1969 ‐ Nelson & Van Dam hypertext editor at Brown 1976 ‐ Architecture Machine Group proposal to DARPA: Multiple Media 1985 ‐ Negroponte, Wiesner: opened MIT Media Lab 1989 ‐ Tim Berners‐Lee proposed the World Wide Web to CERN 1990 ‐ K. Hooper Woolsey, Apple Multimedia Lab 1992 ‐ The first M‐Bone audio multicast on the Net 1993 ‐ U. Illinois National Center for Supercomputing Applications: NCSA Mosaic 1994 ‐ Jim Clark and Marc Andreesen: Netscape 1995 ‐ JAVA for platform‐independent application development.
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Hypermedia Courseware Video Conferencing Video‐on‐demand Interactive TV Groupware Home Shopping Games Virtual Reality Digital video editing and production systems
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