Archive - 2016
April 5th
#NaPoWriMo – Overview
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 04/05/2016 - 06:03So, it is National Poetry Writing Month, and many people are talking about writing a poem a day for the month of April. I did something similar back in Lent 2015, so I figure I’ll give it a shot this April.
I decided to participate a few days into April, but I already had my first poems underway. I wrote The Incomplete Garden in response to a prompt from a poetry group I’m part of.
The view from your favorite or least favorite window.
I started the poem on the first and edited it on the second, sending it to the group, since had to miss the get together.
On the second, I drove up to and unconference in Western Mass. I had been listening to some podcasts on creativity and in one of them there was a suggestion to the effect of “look for three things that you don’t see every day on your way to work”. This idea was the starting point for Road Poem 1. As I drove, I noted things along the way and remembered others and wove them into a pieces of a poem which I recorded on my cell phone as I was driving. The next morning I edited the pieces together.
I hesitated about naming it Road Poem 1, because that implies that there should be a Road Poem 2. I will be keeping my eyes open for subsequent road poems. We’ll see.
It was around the time that I was editing Road Poem 1, that I looked out the window described in The Incomplete Garden, and I saw the April Snow which I started working on Sunday morning and edited and posted Monday morning.
On my way to work on Monday, I was listening to a poetry podcast, and the podcast is what made me think of The China Tea Cup. Like with Road Poem 1, I composed the first draft in my mind, then recorded it on my cellphone. In the evening I edited and posted it.
April 4th
#NaPoWriMo 4: The China Tea Cup
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 04/04/2016 - 19:45The precious china tea cup
sits in the rarefied air
of the glassed in display case.
It’s intricate patterns,
too complicated to comprehend,
helps hide
the imperfections
from all but the most astute
observer.
#NaPoWriMo 3: April Snow
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 04/04/2016 - 07:15One moment
it’s a white out;
the wind is howling,
no visibility,
and the next;
the sun is shining,
illuminating
thick heavy snow
clinging to trees
and weighing down
daffodils.
April 3rd
#PCWM8 Notes: VR Goggles.
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 04/03/2016 - 17:46Often at conferences, or even unconferences like Podcamp Western Mass, some of the best discussions take place away from the sessions, and this year at Podcamp Western Mass 8 was no exception.
For me, it was talking with Maria from Hypergride Business who brought her Virtual Reality viewers with her. They ranged from cardboard headsets which you can find on Amazon for six bucks up through many different sets in the twenty to thirty dollar range.
There were three different features that seemed important to me. One was sturdiness and how well the phone fits. Sets made out of actually cardboard just don’t seem all that sturdy. Perhaps some of that is based on my own experience of making sets out of cardboard when they first came out.
A second feature that was really important to me was how well the control works for them. With Google Cardboard, a magnet near the phone signals the apps. With the sets I’ve made and even with off the shelf cardboard viewers, I’ve never had a lot of luck with this. Some viewers require a separate Bluetooth controller. There are a lot of neat things you could probably do with a Bluetooth controller for gaming, but for most apps simple signaling is probably all you need.
The device that I found my Samsung Galaxy 4 worked very nice in was the Viewmaster VR. It was also nice to have a similar user experience as the Viewmasters from my childhood. One thing that was missing was straps. To really get into virtual reality viewers, the ability to strap the viewer on your head and have your hands free is probably really helpful.
Maria particularly recommended the FIIT VR headset, which has straps but requires a Bluetooth controller. I might get something like this at some later time, especially if someone gaming moves forward with a nice VR glove.
Yet what I was more interested in was talking with Maria about producing VR media. There is the game development side of things which still seems a bit cumbersome. I would like to simply build something in OpenSim which you could easily experience with VR goggles. Even OpenSim would be cool. These seem to be coming, but aren’t really there yet.
For making VR pictures or movies, you can take pictures which get stitched together fairly easily with a cellphone. Or at least I managed to do so with my Samsung Galaxy 4 back when Google Cardboard first came out. Stereoscopic movies seem a bit more difficult. I have friends who have made them and I’ve been kicking around the idea of doing something similar. To see some stereoscopic movies you can view with Google Cardboard style headsets, go to Youtube and search on “yt3d sbs”.
Another VR format is 360 video. These are videos that you can change your perspective. As you turn with your phone, or click on buttons on a computer, you see a different view. A nice example of this is MythBusters: Shark Shipwreck (360 Video).
You need to either use some software to stitch together the different perspectives, or use a camera that does this for you. There aren’t a lot of cameras out there that do this yet, and most of them that do are in the thousands of dollars range. However, Maria mentioned the 360 Fly. It is a relatively inexpensive and easy to use camera for getting started in 360 video. Of course, this is for monoscopic 360 video. Stereoscopic 360 video is a whole different issue, and I haven’t found a good option for that.
I also haven’t been able to find out if it is possible to connect a 360 Fly to a computer to use it as a webcam, or if it is possible, how to do it. I would love to see this done as an interesting way of doing a video conference of a panel. Could you feed a 360 video into a system like Zoom? Could you stitch together different videos from a system like zoom into a simulated room as if all the presenters were seated around a table and you look at different presenters
It looks like 360 cameras are coming into their own and it is probably about time to get one and start testing them.
Road Poem 1
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 04/03/2016 - 08:35I’ve got another hour and a half on the road
and I’m looking for a poem
in the grey branches
beside the interstate
and the women
putting on their make up
as they drive
or the old men
drinking their coffee and smoking cigarettes
as they head off
to the same old job.
I’ve got another hour and a half on the road
and I’m looking for a poem
as I see a young mother
shouting over her shoulder
at her kids
to settle down
as she drives past
the twisted metal
that was once part
of a car.
I’ve got another hour and a half on the road
and I’m looking for a poem
as I see the remains of an old barn
with a for sale sign
that must have been part of a farm
before the interstate came through
and a man in a van
talking on his cellphone
passes
with a license plate
that reads Zone Five
like he’s driving out of a bad
cyberpunk novel.
The GPS tells me
“In a quarter mile keep left to stay on I-91 North”
and when I arrive, what will I have?