- From: Martin Malmsten <martin.malmsten@kb.se>
- Date: Sun, 24 Oct 2010 17:17:50 -0400
- To: "ZENG, MARCIA" <mzeng@kent.edu>
- Cc: Thomas Baker <tbaker@tbaker.de>, public-xg-lld <public-xg-lld@w3.org>
Oooh, that one! Yes, it is pretty great. I love the fact that it engages by flavouring the presentation with something that you are emotionally attached to, i.e where you grew up. I find it very evocative. If we could get the interactive element, i.e create something based on input from the user, I think we have a winner. It would also be a good litmus test to see if the data available (right now) really *is* valuable to end-users. We should do the video too, but this got me excited! /martin On Oct 24, 2010, at 4:38 PM, ZENG, MARCIA wrote: > Hers is the interactive film you can involve to make, using HTML5. > > http://thewildernessdowntown.com/ > This is also what I think the YouTube video should try to achieve: interactive, cool, exciting. > Marcia > > Sent from my iPad > > On Oct 24, 2010, at 16:22, "Martin Malmsten" <martin.malmsten@kb.se> wrote: > >> I think we overlooked the oppurtunity to do an Old Spice-style video ;-) >> >> http://www.astrosmurf.net/wlog/?p=6 >> >> /martin >> >> On Oct 16, 2010, at 8:11 PM, Thomas Baker wrote: >> >>> Dear all, >>> >>> Karen and Mark have posted pointers to linked data related >>> to Anne Frank. Michael Smethurst of BBC has also kindly >>> explained how to access linked data from BBC. I have added >>> these links to a section of [1] on "sources". >>> >>> If anyone else has time over the coming week to gather some >>> more leads, please post to the list or just add to the wiki. >>> I look forward to discussing this next weekend...! >>> >>> Tom >>> >>> [1] http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/YouTube_Video >>> >>> -- >>> Tom Baker <tbaker@tbaker.de> >>> >> >>
Received on Sunday, 24 October 2010 21:18:22 UTC