Offline mashups

5 06 2008

M’colleague Mark Glover continues to work his ICT designing techno magic. I know I shouldn’t be overtly impressed by tech stuff these days, but every now and then Mark says”have you got 5 minutes” and I know this is going to be a journey of discovery for me into things that I might have known were possible but haven’t had time to try. Today was different; I had no idea the Welsh Wizard was going to come up with this one.

We’ve used No Limits Rollercoasters for a couple of years. It’s a great sim where you build a rollercoaster in a quasi-technical drawing environment, then you get to ride the fearsum beast that you created - and analyse where your passengers would have died due to excessive G force. We introduce a number of topics around it in Year 9; design and analysis; the use of ICT in society and how accurate simulators can save money; the shortcomings of simulators; writing letters/memos to theme park owners; designing leaflets/other advertising blurb including podcasts and vodcasts; costings spreadsheets using goal seek (et al) to find break-even points. And we have some great fun seeing what the students come up with in their rollercoaster designs.

But the great just got better. Since I introduced Wings 3D, Mark has been using his outstanding design skills to get students using it to make ’stuff’. His students won first, second and third with their artistic interpretation at the Shropshire Create IT! awards. I’m looking forward to the day when Second Life gets going around here, because our students will have a huge head start in designing prims in Wings. But I digress.

Today Mark showed me how he can create models in Wings and then import to No Limits. He’s got the techs to do the necessary adjustments to the permissions and locations of various files so students can insert their own models into their rollercoaster designs.

I watched in awe as he created a ghost in Fireworks, imported it to Wings then rendered it with UV mapping and created a 3D model to import to No Limits. Then he did the same with a dragon and a galleon he’d created previously.

So what’s the learning potential? No longer will students create beautiful models that they can admire only in Wings 3D. They will now be able to put them anywhere that there’s a need for 3D objects - I’m thinking games, scenery, creating their own landscapes (Mark’s a wizard in Bryce and Daz Studio). They’ll be visualising and creating their own artefacts in different packages, using the appropriate tools for the job without necessarily seeing any difference between one software package and another. That’s what I call ICT capability. It’s the future.


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2 responses to “Offline mashups”

28 06 2008
Kristianstill (17:10:27) :

This I like! Good to meet you Daniel - hope to catch up via Twitter and would love to see / hear how you use the No Limits Rollercoster. We have a lot of disaffect boys at our College and I know they would love to see how many of their passengers they could kill off on their rollercoster. Looking forward to catching up.

23 10 2008
Leon Cych (20:55:45) :

I don’t think you digress at all with the Second Life comment. Being able to build an environment like that outside SL and bring it in would be an amazing project.

The Learn 4 Life island is openfor teachers to come and build in the sandpit for free - that kind of development would be amazing - really amazing.

Here’s an update on different VW providers at the Virtual World Conference on Monday. http://www.l4l.co.uk/?p=115

Like the blog it’s always so interesting.

Leon

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