Normally the environment is too narrow
Posted: Tue Feb 18, 2025 3:21 am
The 'Nano wine' takes a little longer to arrive and that is perhaps not so strange since the wine contains millions of nano capsules and can be activated by microwaves depending on the mood and taste preferences. That's right: microwave wine. But then you have something, because the taste possibilities are endless.
Data journalism and storytelling
The keynote 'Holland from above ( Nederland van boven) ' by Erik van Heeswijk and Jasper Koning made it clear that you can really tell a story from 'dry data journalism'. The new cross-media project shows the Netherlands from a bird's eye view. After all, you can see more from the air than from the ground, especially during a chaotic event such as Queen's Day. The Netherlands is mapped from the air using helicopters, airplanes and hot air balloons, making the rhythms and patterns of our daily lives visible. The data that results from this is 'raw data': it moves but it is not yet a story. It must be more interactive; after all, it is a cross-media project.
The challenge is to combine all the data and create a story from it. In fact, greece phone number list you consume data: you have to be able to grasp it. It has to be tangible, fascinating and insightful so that people can interact with it. The website will play a major role in this: via an interactive map you can view the Netherlands and see which place is the most dangerous or the safest. The project can be followed from 6 December on Nederland 1, via the internet and radio.
Panoramic environment
“People are predictable in taking photos, they often take a photo of a landmark from the same point or place,” Blaise Agüera y Arcas explained in his keynote 'Mapping the augmented city'. This finding was revealed in the app Photosynth . Users of the app took many similar photos of the surroundings.
A to photograph, or too limited. But with a panoramic photo you can capture both the environment and the place. You are, as it were, part of the 'augmented environment'. It is almost no longer virtuality, because the layers of information adapt to reality, as it were. You become one with the environment you have captured. It is the 'near world' and just as open as the connection itself, the user is that connection. By 'tying together' the data of the users, there is co-creation and you get an almost complete representation of that environment.
High expectations
About 5000 people visited PICNIC this year, the exact numbers have yet to be announced. It is exciting every year whether the festival meets the high expectations of the visitors. People always expect new innovation and more renewal. Did PICNIC meet your expectations?
Data journalism and storytelling
The keynote 'Holland from above ( Nederland van boven) ' by Erik van Heeswijk and Jasper Koning made it clear that you can really tell a story from 'dry data journalism'. The new cross-media project shows the Netherlands from a bird's eye view. After all, you can see more from the air than from the ground, especially during a chaotic event such as Queen's Day. The Netherlands is mapped from the air using helicopters, airplanes and hot air balloons, making the rhythms and patterns of our daily lives visible. The data that results from this is 'raw data': it moves but it is not yet a story. It must be more interactive; after all, it is a cross-media project.
The challenge is to combine all the data and create a story from it. In fact, greece phone number list you consume data: you have to be able to grasp it. It has to be tangible, fascinating and insightful so that people can interact with it. The website will play a major role in this: via an interactive map you can view the Netherlands and see which place is the most dangerous or the safest. The project can be followed from 6 December on Nederland 1, via the internet and radio.
Panoramic environment
“People are predictable in taking photos, they often take a photo of a landmark from the same point or place,” Blaise Agüera y Arcas explained in his keynote 'Mapping the augmented city'. This finding was revealed in the app Photosynth . Users of the app took many similar photos of the surroundings.
A to photograph, or too limited. But with a panoramic photo you can capture both the environment and the place. You are, as it were, part of the 'augmented environment'. It is almost no longer virtuality, because the layers of information adapt to reality, as it were. You become one with the environment you have captured. It is the 'near world' and just as open as the connection itself, the user is that connection. By 'tying together' the data of the users, there is co-creation and you get an almost complete representation of that environment.
High expectations
About 5000 people visited PICNIC this year, the exact numbers have yet to be announced. It is exciting every year whether the festival meets the high expectations of the visitors. People always expect new innovation and more renewal. Did PICNIC meet your expectations?