I really don’t love writing excessively negative things, but I feel the urgent need to express my disdain for one of the classes I’ve had the “joy” of taking this semester, VC251. It took me two or three semesters to even get into the class, and as a result of EMF252 (the UTV62 class), I was unable to take it in-person, so this semester I was finally able to get into (and therefore even able to consider settling for) an online section of the class.

To put it lightly, Online VC251 is a special kind of hell that I would never wish upon anyone, unless they didn’t have other classes. The entire course, which is conducted via WebCT Vista, is very poorly organized, and the bulk of the instructional material comes from these two books we were told to buy, Adobe Photoshop CS3 Classroom in a Book and Adobe Illustrator CS3 Classroom in a Book.

So we work through the lessons in these books, which in a way, are very remedial and basic lessons, which serve almost more as an introduction to the very concept of “photoshop” and “illustrator.” And immediately thereafter we’re expected to do a complicated project involving type, compositing multiple photographs and a poem. A poem! For the Illustrator section, we learn selections, layers, LiveTrace, creating some simple shapes, and a few other little things, and immediately thereafter we’re expected to trace a comic book cover.

A few very fortunate people were able to find very, very simple comic books, with no shading of any sort, no background to speak of, and only one or two characters with maybe one prop. Unfortuantely, after three or four pages of google image results, all I was able to find were hellaciously difficult comic covers. Add to that a lack of any real text other than the title, and you’ve got a manageable assignment. Unfortunately, since we were told to find our own comics, and I didn’t want to spend three hours looking for that simple comic, I ended up using a quite difficult comic to trace. Hilariously enough, one involving fair use. The original image can be seen here.

And this was just a few hours before it was due, because I’d forgotten it in favor of completing projects for my in-person classes, taking calls, and other miscellaneous shenanigans. So I started looking at the image, and realized that the assignment involved tracing with Illustrator’s pen tool. “oops.”

A lot of this was my own shortsightedness, needless to say I really should have skipped out on both weekend overnights, and classes/work on Monday and Tuesday in order to work through the project and get everything done. I think that with that much time, working straight through, I might have gotten a simple version of the image completed. I ended up using Illustrator’s Live Trace tool, which we were “kind of” told not to use. I got the image done and it looks great, but I’m not sure what kind of grade I’ll get on it.

The project in and of itself is not too bad an idea, although I think it’s totally inappropriate for a Freshman VC class, and almost more importantly, I’m fairly certain that the class itself is totally inappropriate for freshman Photo majors. In a pre-PHO382/199/282 era, I bet it’s main purpose was to introduce Freshman/Sophomore photo majors to the idea of Photoshop, but between what we learned in my 382 class, and the fact that I’ve already worked through several incarnations of the Photoshop CIB during high school, the Photoshop part of the class was really easy.

I think the projects for Illustrator have been hellacious, unnecessary and completely out of line, as far as the actual skill set of someone meeting the prerequisites for this class are concerned, and a more appropriate tutorial, like something involving an actual comic, and something being an actual tutorial, would have been very much appreciated.

Purely for the purpose of making sure I know how to use Illustrator, I may this summer go back through the CIB on it, although as a result of my contempt for and disappointment with VC251, I may just trash all of my files related to the class and pack the books away somewhere.

I really am disappointed that this is how I end the semester… with such strong contempt for this class, but I feel cheated, having paid the tuition and lab fees for this class, when about 90% of the learning materials were a pair of $50 books from the vendor of the apps in question. The class itself was very poorly organized, so if the instructor did provide any information, I never found it until it was too late. That, and I’ve always thought the entire point of an online class was the ability to work at your own pace, and see everything coming up in advance. I don’t even think this class had a syllabus, and if it did, there was no warning at all about the assignments coming up.

Don’t take Online VC251. Trust me, and if you don’t trust me, trust Brandy. If you have to take VC251, do everything in your power to take it in-person, even if it costs you more in supplies, or in printing.

Last night Megan linked me to an article on the PhotoJojo site, detailing a project that anyone can do called Photo365. If you’ve been looking at my flickr feed, you’re probably fairly well-aware of the fact that I use my iPhone to take photos and post them online quite often.

Although, I wouldn’t mind a good excuse to carry around the D300 a bit more often. And it sounds like there’s gains abound to be had while participating in the Photo365 project — Especially the part where…

Taking a photo a day will make you a better photographer. Using your camera every day will help you learn its limits. You will get better at composing your shots, you’ll start to care about lighting, and you’ll become more creative with your photography when you’re forced to come up with something new every single day.

Although I can’t really start right now with it, I’d really like to start this summer, and hopefully be able to keep up with it next school year. Although I’ve been pretty good at blogging every day, I know that taking photos sometimes becomes difficult for me, because it’s not really something I can do during classes. (Although between-class photos are better anyway.)

So I intend to start the project over the summer, I am probably going to either get Flickr Pro, or set up my blog on the U60, but that’s a project for the summer, rather than posting every image to Blogger or Flickr. Things to consider later on, anyway.

I’ve been working Meaghan’s overnight shift, and somehow randomly decided it would be cool to finally go ahead and clean up the lab desk area. I’m not going to lie, I enjoyed it. Probably a little bit too much, but it’s something I have wanted to do all semester, and having done so gives me this weird feeling of accomplishment.

The main inspiration to clean the lab desk was the note put up by the South Lab director, saying that the Overnight people are to clean the lab station. My big problem with this is that there seems to have been no actual communication between Labs staff and Academic Computing Help Desk staff in this decision.

After having gotten it done and having gotten everything put back into place, I feel like I should have done this a very long time ago. The whole area was very grungy, and extraordinarily dusty. Being a bit of a clean freak myself, I’m not entirely sure how they were able to stand it day in and day out, the main thing is that there were massive amounts of used staples and huge piles of old dust. Not just dust, I think much of it was old dust.

They didn’t just have dust. It was very, very old dust. Old dust that was probably last addressed in 2005 or so when the OptiPlex GX270 machines SCLLAB1 and SCLLAB2 were brand new. The cables were disorganized and a mess, and the workspace suffered from pretty terrible choices in the exact placement of the machines.

I even re-did some of the wiring on the left computer, whose wires were very badly messed up. A nifty little advantage of the re-wiring is that the overnight staff can pull the phone out a bit more to get easier access to it while on a call and printing at the same time. It may be fine for the daytime lab staff that shouldn’t be on the phone.

Over the summer I’m kind of going to miss this desk, especially now that I’ve put so much effort into de-grunging it. Ah well, at least I won’t have to suffer the moral question of whether or not to let a student sans-ID into the lab before 8 a.m.

Earlier this morning, I finished watching the VH1 show I downloaded from iTunes, The Shot. In The Shot, eight or so people competed to become the next big fashion photographer.

The production values of the show weren’t that great, even in the last episode I was distracted by a few audio problems, but I don’t necessarily think high production values were the goal of the show. As a show about photography, I think it succeeded as a show about photography, although I don’t think it was necessarily meant to appeal to people actually doing or studying photography, except as a general broad-strokes type of thing. It’s intended audience really probably was “people who watch VH1.” Although I’ll admit that one of the biggest reasons I liked it was the drama, and because that first episode was free on iTunes.

Anyway, my favorite of the contestants ended up winning, which was cool. I think this was the first time I kept track of a “reality” show from beginning to end (albeit after the fact, I think the show is a year or two old by now.)

Well, I finally got what I perceive to be “enough” time to go through and back up all of the data from the ThinkPad R61i, and reformat the thing to get a fresh install of Windows Vista Ultimate. Everything was getting slow and quite disorganized, so I figured I’d go ahead and get everything cleared out and set back up. Mainly, I want to be ready for my trip this summer where everything will need to be fast.

Another big concern was that I’ve been somewhat irresponsible in the management of my Vista system so far — I wasn’t sure for a very long time of exactly which software I wanted on the machine, so I ended up uninstalling and reinstalling a bunch of different pieces of software several times. That, a few mistakes with some developer tools, and the upgrade from Home Premium to Ultimate kind of caused things to become disorganized in the system. My intent after this reformat is to keep everything going well not only for the summer, but for Fall 2008 and Spring 2009 as well.

Maybe it’s a bit of a far-fetched goal, but for this install of Vista to last until Fall 2009 would be pretty great. I’ve had Mac OS X installs last that long, so my presumption is that if I do it right this time around, I can have the setup last quite awhile.

Another thing I’m doing to try to increase the longevity of the install is to actually keep up with a backup regiment. In the next week or so after I find and install all of my favorite utilities, my intent is to make a master backup onto DVDs that I can fall back upon if necessary. In addition, I’m going to be doing a complete PC backup on a weekly basis.

For software, I’m going to go with Outlook for mail, and I’m going to try to find a Calendar connector for the Oracle Calendar setup. For productivity software beyond Office, I can’t think of anything I really need aside from the Adobe Creative Suite, which I’d like to buy for the Windows machine at some point. (Although until then, I’ll just do Photoshop CS3 on it’s own, because getting all of them is quite bothersome.) I’ll probably grab XChat and Pidgin, and a few other little utilities like the VNC client and whatnot will fall into place over time.

So here’s to keeping my Windows system running better!