Stride Design: Difference between revisions

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Initial contact: Andrew Nairne <acn36@cam.ac.uk>
Initial contact: Andrew Nairne <acn36@cam.ac.uk>
 
Project manager on behalf of Carol Ann Duffy: Helen Taylor - pa.poetlaureate@googlemail.com
Project client to be determined - possibly Simon Ruffle of stride design.
Project client to be determined - possibly Simon Ruffle of stride design.


The Poet Laureate's Web Transitions
The Poet Laureate's Web Transitions


The Poet Laureate has appointed 10 leading poets to work with Cambridge University Museums and young people from the county. Your task is to provide a novel tool that can emulate the exact layout of any page from a museum web server, but with the original text (perhaps partly) removed. Invited poets and young people should be able to substitute their own poetry or other text by typing directly over the visual layout as if in a drawing editor. These transformed pages can then be published and viewed from an alternative server that offers a "mashed up" version of any museum page for public viewing.
The Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy has appointed 10 leading poets to work with Cambridge University Museums and young people from the county. Your task is to provide a novel tool that can emulate the exact layout of any page from a museum web server, but with the original text (perhaps partly) removed. Invited poets and young people should be able to substitute their own poetry or other text by typing directly over the visual layout as if in a drawing editor. These transformed pages can then be published and viewed from an alternative server that offers a "mashed up" version of any museum page for public viewing.


Title: Site-specific poetry mash-ups
Title: Site-specific poetry mash-ups


In most websites, the words are the real content (even Google image search relies on captions to work properly). But the goal of this project is to preserve everything except the words. Your task is to create a website mash-up tool that allows even non-technical users to modify or transform the words of a site when viewed from an alternative URL, or with an alternative client. This project is in collaboration with a scheme where six Cambridge museums will each be hosting a high-profile poet in residence. You need to design a tool that will be easily usable by a professional poet, but give them enough technical freedom to augment, interpret, or even subvert the museum's collection via its website.
In most websites, the words are the real content (even Google image search relies on captions to work properly). But the goal of this project is to preserve everything except the words. Your task is to create a website mash-up tool that allows even non-technical users to modify or transform the words of a site when viewed from an alternative URL, or with an alternative client. This project is in collaboration with a scheme where six Cambridge museums will each be hosting a high-profile poet in residence. You need to design a tool that will be easily usable by a professional poet, but give them enough technical freedom to augment, interpret, or even subvert the museum's collection via its website.

Revision as of 04:00, 11 October 2012

Initial contact: Andrew Nairne <acn36@cam.ac.uk> Project manager on behalf of Carol Ann Duffy: Helen Taylor - pa.poetlaureate@googlemail.com Project client to be determined - possibly Simon Ruffle of stride design.

The Poet Laureate's Web Transitions

The Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy has appointed 10 leading poets to work with Cambridge University Museums and young people from the county. Your task is to provide a novel tool that can emulate the exact layout of any page from a museum web server, but with the original text (perhaps partly) removed. Invited poets and young people should be able to substitute their own poetry or other text by typing directly over the visual layout as if in a drawing editor. These transformed pages can then be published and viewed from an alternative server that offers a "mashed up" version of any museum page for public viewing.

Title: Site-specific poetry mash-ups

In most websites, the words are the real content (even Google image search relies on captions to work properly). But the goal of this project is to preserve everything except the words. Your task is to create a website mash-up tool that allows even non-technical users to modify or transform the words of a site when viewed from an alternative URL, or with an alternative client. This project is in collaboration with a scheme where six Cambridge museums will each be hosting a high-profile poet in residence. You need to design a tool that will be easily usable by a professional poet, but give them enough technical freedom to augment, interpret, or even subvert the museum's collection via its website.