User:Vtaylor/CIS89A Learning Web Design/Images and Media

A picture is worth a thousand words
 * It is easy and inexpensive to add pictures to web pages. This has been one of the most important changes that web publishing has made. Printing pictures on paper, especially in color remains very expensive. The additional data to include high resolution images to a web page is relatively little. So use images to tell your story and add interest to your web page.

Motion, Sound & Magic
 * One of the great benefits of the web and the internet has been the virtually unlimited availability of content, specifically images, audio and video.

Learning outcomes
 * become familiar with graphics software
 * recognize appropriate web image file formats
 * use images as elements in the foreground of a web page
 * specify the height and width of images
 * provide alternate text and titles for images
 * link images to other content on a web site
 * add figure captions
 * style foreground images


 * understand the benefits and limitations of media on the web
 * include appropriate media to enhance content
 * understand how plug-ins are used with web browsers
 * link to different types of media
 * embed different types of media into a web page
 * style multimedia content

Keywords
 * image file format, copyright, usage, license, gif, jpeg, png, resolution, foreground, height, width, alternate text, title, link, caption, border, padding, margin, background, transparency, animation, compression
 * image, audio, video, closed caption, transcript, plug-in, attributes, source, container

Reading guide
 * What are good sources to find free and open images that you can use for your web pages?
 * What are some graphics applications that are commonly used?
 * What are the most commonly used web image file formats?
 * What are the differences between the compression types? Why does this matter?


 * What are the common media file formats that are used on the web?
 * How are the media formats accessed from a web page?
 * What are some of the benefits of including media on web pages?

== Assignments==

Coding project title and required elements All these should be visible just looking at the "page" that displays from the link you submit
 * cis89media1 - img, src, width, height, alt, title (image attribute), href, figure, figcaption, .gif, .jpg, .png
 * all 3 types of images
 * resize image that is also a link to the full size source image
 * captions, alternate text
 * position next to text with space around the image


 * href, audio, source, controls, width, video
 * sound file, video file, player controls
 * basic requirements in all coding assignments .css for style and formatting, documentation comments in .css and .html


 * 1) Review the Keywords and Reading guide questions at the top of this page. These will help you look for important ideas in the rest of assignments for this module.


 * 1) Textbook - Learning Web Design - Chapters 7, 10, 23-25 - 7, Adding Images, 10. Embedded Media, 23. Web Image Basics, 24. Image Asset Production, 25. SVG


 * 1) Free image editing tools - There are plenty of good software tools and apps for editing images that are free. Find recommendations reviews. Try one. Have you used any other free image editing tools? Can you recommend any? Post your experience with free image editing tools to Image editing tools discussion.


 * 1) A phone as a camera - There are sites with tips for taking pictures with your phone. Find an article with information about phones and images. Post a link to the article and a brief description of why this is important to web developers to the Phones and images discussion.

Review the selections in 2 other posts.
 * 1) Explore the Wikimedia Commons and any of Free Stock Photos databases of millions freely usable media files to which anyone can contribute. Read the Reuse guide for the free license requirements. Find images in the Wikimedia image collection that you might include in your site. In the Creative Commons Images discussion, post links to 2-3 images  that you selected to include in your site.


 * 1) Visual story - Sometimes a picture can tell a story without any words. These images can make a powerful addition to your web site. It may be simpler to show something in a picture than it is to describe it. Find one image that tells a story. How does the image you selected tell the story? What is it about the image that would be hard to describe?  Post a link to the image and briefly describe the story it tells to the Visual stories discussion. Review the visual stories of 2 others.

There are multiple image file formats that are used on web pages - .gif, .jpeg, .png are the most commonly used. There is a version of .gif called animated gif that combines a series of individual images linked together so they make a little movie. Find an example of a site that includes an animated gif file. Post a link to the image you are sharing, and identify the file type in the More images discussion. Look at sources suggested by 2 others.
 * 1) More images - There are many other sources of images that you can use freely. Visit one or more of these sites and select an image to share.


 * 1)  Media - In a new project, use the assignment elements, attributes and properties to include and play audio and video selections. Find examples of videos and sound files that are licensed through the Creative Commons so that you can include them in your web page. Have you worked out how to embed the media file? Did you make the viewer controls visible to the visitor? Use all the elements, attributes and properties within your page. Include some descriptive information so the viewer knows what is being demonstrated within your page. Also, use comments in your HTML code to indicate what you are doing. Publish your project file.
 * 2) Submit the link to your project to the  Working with Media  assignment.
 * 3) Post a link to your project and any comments or questions about the assignment to the  Working with Media  discussion.
 * 4) Review the work of 2 others - the page display and the source code. Post a note with links to those projects, and a brief description of your observations - anything that you learned from looking at these? Any ideas you have for using in your own work in the future? Post to the Working with Media discussion.


 * 1) Image maps - Find and review one or more of the tutorials on the HTML required to define and use Image Maps.  Find an example of an image map on the web. Post a link to your selection to the Image Map discussion along with a brief description on why an image map is appropriate for this example.

NOTE: Throughout the course there are a number of discussion activities that require research and comments. These are important because they address topics that web developers need to know about. And you should be critically examining the site designs, layouts and usability. We will be look at site evaluation criteria in more depth later in the course. For now use this evaluation criteria to guide your review of the sites you visit. In your post for each of the research activities include a note about the site design based on one of the criteria in the evaluation description.


 * 1) Success Skills - Share it - Communication and Collaboration are becoming more important as we are expanding our personal and professional networks of contacts and businesses. Review 2-3 articles from the Success skills - SHARE list in the media section below. The internet is all about sharing - information and processes including web development. What do professional web developers do? Look at the .html and .css source code for the sites you selected. What do you see that is different from what you are creating with Glitch? How does the code determine what the site looks like? Can you adapt some of these features and ideas in your own code? Post a link and a brief summary of one idea that you got from looking at the source code for the article you selected to the Success Skills - Share it discussion.


 * 1) Group Project groups discussions - Web Design - For the activities in this Module, you accessed a number of web sites. In addition to learning from the content, practice evaluating web design on the sites you visit. In each module, we focus on another area of web design and development. What are you looking for in good web design based on the topics we covered in the course so far? What is something important and interesting that you learned about web design? Do you have questions about good web design? How would you apply these design ideas to your own work? Provide a link to the example and brief description of the the design feature. Share with your group in the Group discussion. Are there outstanding questions? Contribute one or more posts to the discussion for the group. If you have a question about working as a group, please ask.

== ==
 * Textbook - Learning Web Design - Chapters 7, 10, 23-25 - 7. Adding Images, 10. Embedded Media, 23. Web Image Basics, 24. Image Asset Production, 25. SVG


 * HTML Dog HTML Beginner Tutorial
 * HTML5 Introduction and HTML5 video tutorials
 * HTML5 Test - Check your browser for HTML5 support

Image map
 * Map and Area Elements - good tutorial on setting up and using image maps.

Images, apps and software
 * 10+ Best Free or Open Source Photoshop Alternative Software (2011)


 * 5 Free Open Source Image Editors For Windows, Mac, and Linux
 * National Geographic Photo Gallery: Tips for Better iPhone Photography

MEDIA http://www.diigo.com/rss/user/vtaylor/media

SHARE http://www.diigo.com/rss/user/vtaylor/shareit

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