Oct 062009
 

This week’s Design Journal assignment required us, among other things, to write a 55-word story, in the spirit of  55 Fiction. Frank didn’t say so directly, but I imagine this has something to do with the importance of story-telling in design. And what better way to understand the important elements of a story than to whittle it down to its bare-bones elements. It reminds me a little bit of Angry Alien Productions’ 30-Second Bunnies, in that only the basics remain, and yet the story still functions. Here is my first ever 55-word story.


Dead Giveaway


Dark-Field Lighting 2 by Kyle May
Attribution License

“Sweetheart,” he gushes.

“Whiskey, darling?”

“Always.”

The waiter pauses.

“Jameson. On rocks, for him.” Sipping wine, she fumbles in her purse.

Pocket vibration. “Sweetheart, I’ve gotta. . . Hello?” He rises. Impatient ice melts into Jameson; she fumbles in her purse.

Only after paramedics remove the motionless body, the waiter remembers crimson nails, fumbling in her purse.

Like this? You might also enjoy these:

Dec 182008
 

I saw Lee Kolbert‘s Worldle Meme about 3 weeks ago, but am only NOW getting to it (and purely because I am procrastinating / avoiding work, I might add, as I have approximately 55 pieces of work staring me in the face to be assessed).  Her meme asked readers to:

  1. Create a Wordle from your blog’s RSS feed.
  2. Blog it and describe your reaction.  Any surprises?
  3. Tag others to do the same.
  4. Be sure to link back here and to where you were first tagged.

So, here is mine:

community, think, students: all good!

My reaction:  I like, I like!  I am not surprised to see “students” so BIG, as well as “think” and “community” – in fact I like this a lot.  I’m rather surprised, though, that “MYP” is so small.  However, this confirms what I was thinking recently when I felt that I should be blogging more about MYP, as so few people are (I recently discovered that many people discover my blog via Google searches with the terms “MYP asssessment” or “MYP reflection”).  So, this Wordle, with “MYP” being so small, is a good kick-in-the-pants for me to share more about my experiences and thoughts on this IBO programme.

Ok, the tags:

Happy Wordle-ing! 🙂

Like this? You might also enjoy these:

 18 December, 2008  Posted by at 10:31 am Cool Tools, Writing Tagged with: , , , ,  2 Responses »
May 132008
 

external image comment_challenge_logo_2.png

Day 9: Should We Be Commenting on Blogs?

Check out this article and the many references to bloggers who think that comments should be disabled on blogs. Read through those posts and consider whether or not you think it’s better to build community through comments or through conversations occurring across blogs–or maybe a combination of both. What, to your mind, is the purpose of comments on blogs and are we better served by encouraging people to respond to ideas on our blogs or over on their own blogs?

I read the article. Interesting. My short answer to the big question “Should we be commenting?”: it’s up to the blogger. Perhaps you want interaction on your own blog. Perhaps you don’t. Consider your purpose and audience and go from there. Incidentally, lots of non-blog websites offer a space for people to share and interact. Again, it depends on the purpose and what you hope to achieve. And perhaps you can turn on / off comments for a particular post, allowing you to play it by ear.

My perspective

If I didn’t want people to interact with me, I wouldn’t have started blogging in the first place. Whether that interaction comes via a trackback, a Tweet, or a comment makes little difference to me — I just want to connect. And enabling comments is an easy way for that to happen. As I said earlier, I have also realized recently that I often say more interesting and substantial things on other people’s blogs than I do on my own. I’m better at being invited than being the invitee, I guess.

Like this? You might also enjoy these:

 13 May, 2008  Posted by at 2:56 pm Writing Tagged with:  4 Responses »