This blog is for Year7/Year8 ICT students. You will find information to help with some of the lessons and, in some cases, additional material you can use.
Monday, 8 July 2013
Sweding
Sweding is a term that came from the film Be Kind Rewind, where Jack Black and others did zero-budget spoof remakes of existing films. Swedes are short, featuring well known scenes and characters, and use daft props in place of SFX/CGI.
Here's the film trailer, followed by a sample of its Ghostbusters swede:
There are many examples of swedes online; here are a few examples:
Transformers:
Wednesday, 16 January 2013
Analysing fonts
When you're designing or analysing a text, whether thats a Word or Publisher document, a Photoshop image (perhaps a poster), website/web page, whatever it may be, one of the most important factors will be your font. The choice of font (and its size, colour, case [ie use of capitals] and any effects such as bold, underline or Italics) for any aspect of the text will help suggest:
Lets consider how this works with a screenshot from three websites: the BBC Health website; Kids Against Tobacco Smoke; Dr P Body's Learning/Fun Center.
- the target audience, always the most important consideration
- the tone: some fonts have a fun feel, others more serious
- different fonts also help to distinguish separate sections
This is a serif font. (Often used to set a serious tone, which is why Times New Roman is the default font in Word!)
This is a sans-serif font. (Often used to set a light, fun tone: Comic Sans is the classic example)
Lets consider how this works with a screenshot from three websites: the BBC Health website; Kids Against Tobacco Smoke; Dr P Body's Learning/Fun Center.
Tuesday, 8 January 2013
Search engines + narrowing results
There are many competing search engines, each using slightly or radically different techniques to come up with their results. There is one globally dominant company, and we easily understand what is meant if someone suggests we 'google it'! However, even Google has more limited success in some countries such as China.
There are some files you need to access at Y:\ICT\KS3\Year 7\The Internet.
The links below will help you to explore and differentiate between the competing search engines, and understand how to get better, more specific/relevant search results.
Some of the techniques for better search results we'll explore include...
There are some files you need to access at Y:\ICT\KS3\Year 7\The Internet.
The links below will help you to explore and differentiate between the competing search engines, and understand how to get better, more specific/relevant search results.
- The BBC's WebWise site is a good place to start: its brief but gives you a very clear summary of what a search engine is and how they vary.
- Wiki on search engines, including history of their development (have you ever heard of Netscape? It used to be as dominant as Google is now!) and a list of major search engines. Some other examples of search engines:
- Dogpile;
- Yahoo!/AltaVista;
- Bing;
- Ask;
- Here's a list of the 15 most popular search engines in the USA, which you can compare to ...
- ...the most popular search engines in the UK! (Novermber 2012 figures) or ...
- ... other countries such as China! (September 2012)
- To get better results, use the advanced search options. Here's the BBC's WebWise list of tips on getting better results.
- You can also use Boolean operators. Here's a detailed explanation, including graphics. This is a really good explanation, with examples for how you would use OR, AND, NOT in searches.
- This is the BBC WebWise explanation of Boolean operators.
- Here's the Wiki on Boolean operators.
- If you wanted to find out more about how these companies and the search engine industry operate, including the economics and politics behind them, you could try newspaper sites such as The Guardian's search engine articles.
- Google allows you to use all sorts of extra search terms; you may not remember many of these at first, but you can always google 'google search terms' for help! Here's Google's guide to its advanced search terms.
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Click here for an interactive demo of how Boolean search terms work |
- using the minus sign: a search for salsa finds everything to do with food and dance; if we only want the food-based reults we change our search to -dance salsa. The Boolean operator NOT also works like this: salsa NOT dance will achieve the same results.
- using the asterisk (SHIFT+8) symbol: if we search adam ant we get 5.2m hits, but if we search adam ant* we get 31.9m hits. Why? Because the * tells the search engine to include all words starting with ant, which is useful here because Adam Ant was originally in a band called Adam and the Ants! You use the * if there are several relevant variations of one of your search terms
- adding more words: we're usually looking to reduce the number of hits to get more relevant results, and adding more words usually does this. headlines 2000 gets 195m hits; headlines year 2000 reduces this to 132m; uk headlines year 2000 reduces this to 102m
- word order: whichever words we put first are ranked as more important in the search, which is why I put uk first in the above example!
- speech marks: if we put "" round words the search engine will look for that exact phrase. "adam ant" gets half as many hits as simply adam ant, and they're more relevant
- and finally... The Boolean operator AND tells the search engine not to simply look for web pages with any of the words in the search phrase, but to look for results with all of the terms you put AND between. So, if I search for uk newspaper headlines year 2000 I get 153m hits. If I amend this to uk AND newspaper headlines year 2000 I only get hits which have both UK and newspapers: I now get 144m hits. The search uk AND newspaper AND headlines AND year 2000 gets 104m hits. If I amended this to headline* it jumps up to 365m!

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