Home > Digital Media

Digital Media

UC Irvine Grant Contest Seeks New Digital Media Tools

9/10/2007

The University of California Humanities Research Institute is leading a $2 million grant competition to foster new digital media tools, UPI reported. The project, funded by the MacArthur Foundation, has the broader aim of finding out how technology is changing the way young people learn, play, and socialize in civic life.

C-Labs Digital Library Now Supports High Definition

9/6/2007

Digital media service provider Cdigix has added HD capabilities to its C-Labs solutions. C-Labs are designed to provide tools for higher education faculty and institutions to maintain and post online digital media while complying with copyright laws.

USC Prof: Internet Will Soon be Overwhelmed by Video

9/4/2007

A University of California, San Diego professor has warned that a massive expansion of Internet capacity is required in the United States to keep the economy from slowing down and possibly stalling.

AVerMedia Kicks Off Video Contest

8/29/2007

AVerMedia Technologies, a provider of multimedia and presentation tools, is launching a new contest for students, instructors, and administrators, calling on them to produce videos describing compelling classroom experiences made possible through the use of document cameras. The contest, dubbed the AVerVision Video Contest, is open to all North American K-12 schools, colleges, and universities.

Anystream Nabs Lectopia, Launches Lecture Capture Division

8/28/2007

Anystream this week acquired lecture capture technology provider Lectopia and added it to its higher education division, Apreso. The two units will be combined to form a new entity called Echo360, which will focus on lecture capture and dissemination.

Berkeley Warns Freshman To 'Learn Before You Burn'

8/28/2007

University of California, Berkeley has mounted a publicity campaign to warn its incoming freshman class of the consequences of downloading copyrighted music. The message of the campaign is "Learn Before You Burn" and is directed at the 95 percent of incoming freshman who own computers and may have not been aware that most music is not, in fact, free.

UMBC Supercomputing Center Eyes Socio-Econ Problems

8/27/2007

The University of Maryland-Baltimore County and IBM said they would collaborate to build a facility dedicated to research on aerospace, defense, financial services, medical imaging, and weather/climate change prediction.

UIUC Prof to Head Team Studying Advanced Multimedia

8/27/2007

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign computer science professor Klara Nahrstedt was picked as chairman of one of the newest of the Association of Computing Machinery's famous special interest groups, this one focusing on advanced multimedia applications.

How Dartmouth Produces Video Podcasts

8/22/2007

With an $8,000 investment, Dartmouth's Department of Physics and Astronomy has set up the capability to provide video podcasts for courses that enable students to watch lectures they may have missed or that warrant review.

SUNY-Maritime College Partners with History Channel for Online Courses

8/22/2007

The State University of New York-Maritime College this fall will debut two new online courses developed in collaboration with The History Channel. Both courses are to be based around History Channel television series and will be offered for credit, marking the first time The History Channel has developed a course for college credit.

The Promise and Challenges of Integrating Interactive Technologies into University Pedagogy

8/22/2007

Randy Jackson examines the quest at the University of Washington (UW), Seattle, to create added value in existing learning environments.

LOC Funds U Illinois Virtual Content Preservation Project

8/21/2007

The Library of Congress announced $2.5 million in grants for projects to establish digital format standards for preserving photos, films, music, and video games. The funding covers eight organizations involved in significant digital content projects, including UCLA's Film and Television Archive and the "Preserving Virtual Worlds" project at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign.

U Penn To Put Special Collections Online

8/17/2007

Penn Libraries, the University of Pennsylvania Library system, is embarking on a project to digitize its special collections, including rare books and historical documents. The project will kick off this summer and culminate in a fully searchable collection of rare books online.

U Portland Deploys File-Sharing Software

8/17/2007

The University of Portland recently deployed GroupDrive software from South River Technologies, a developer of file transfer and collaboration software, for online file sharing on its campus. The software will be used for student and faculty collaboration, as well as for the university's back office, and is designed to replace other forms of online file-sharing such as email, according to South River.

U Oklahoma Taps Day for Content Management

8/15/2007

The University of Oklahoma will deploy Day Software's Communiqué, an enterprise Web content management suite, to help revamp the school's various portals for students, staff, and alumni.

Profs Building Open-Source Educational Gaming Engine

8/13/2007

Washington State University Vancouver professor Scott Wallace and University of Puget Sound computer science professor Andrew Nierman were recently awarded a $150,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to build a gaming engine designed to make learning computer science more absorbing for students.

CLIR Appoints Michael Keller Senior Presidential Fellow

8/8/2007

The Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) has announced the appointment of Stanford University librarian Michael Keller as CLIR Senior Presidential Fellow.

Apple Upgrades iMac Line

8/7/2007

Apple CEO Steve Jobs today introduced the company's new lineup of all in one iMac systems, replacing the previous lineup. The new models come in two form factors: one with a 20-inch screen, one with a 24-inch screen. Both now sport aluminum enclosures like the Mac Pro and MacBook Pro systems. The new systems are based around Intel's latest Core 2 Duo processors running at clock speeds up to 2.8 GHz.

Adobe Names Design Competition Winners

8/6/2007

Adobe last week announced the results of its annual Design Achievement Awards, a competition honoring the best student work in design, video, film, illustration, and animation. More than 2,500 students from 30 countries competed in the 2007 program. Most of the awards went to students from the United States and Germany, with South Korea picking up one.

USC Unveils TrojanTV Entertainment Site

8/3/2007

The University of Southern California has launched TrojanTV All-Access, a multimedia website featuring a variety of Trojan Athletics content ranging from live broadcasts of games, video archives or previous games, a talk show, and other original programs for Trojan fans across the 'Net.

Penn State Launches Cable Television Network

7/31/2007

Penn State University Wednesday launched Penn State On Demand, a collaboration with cable provider Comcast to provide its 2.4 million Pennsylvania customers high speed access to hundreds of hours of programming produced by the university.

Aviation University Launches Worldwide Virtual Classroom

7/27/2007

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (Daytona Beach, FL) has debuted EagleVision, a Web-enabled, collaborative virtual classroom designed for aviation and aeronautical education.

New DSpace Foundation Names Executive Director

7/25/2007

Michele Kimpton will lead the new DSpace Foundation, formed by MIT and HP, as its executive director.

Ball State Rolls Out HD in Digital Media Project

7/24/2007

A years-long project at Ball State University to digitize a huge range of content is being expanded to include high-definition TV in its offerings.

Temple U Solves Content Management Challenge

7/11/2007

With roughly half a million pages of content on more than 500 well used Web sites, Temple University faced a huge challenge in getting content management under control.