Thursday, November 27, 2008

Recently seen on Slashdot...


...power corrupts. Powerpoint corrupts absolutely.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Revolution Media US$39!!

Revolution Media is being offered for a limited time for the fantastic price of $39!

Until November 30, you can save $10 off the normal download price of $49.

What is Rev Media? Rev Media has nearly all of the most important features of the full-blown Revolution product lines with the exception of being able to compile a standalone executable file. However, anything created with Media will run on all supported platforms (meaning, most importantly, Mac and Windows) via the freely-downloadable Media stack player (which is similar to the functionality provided by Hyperstudio).

From the company's website:

Revolution Media is the fun and creative, do-anything software construction kit everyone can afford. Learn programming logic, build exciting games, make quick work of projects large and small, and construct compelling multimedia experiences using drag-and-drop interface elements and the world's easiest language.

The company touts as advantage #1 that you can "learn programming" using Media. But, inasmuch as the "P" word tends to scare off alot of people who envision learning some nasty systems programming language featuring lots of ugly dot.syntax.unreadable.incomprehensible.crap, it should be noted that Media comes with the following out of the box:

* Templates to help automate the production of games, kiosks, portfolios and slide-shows
* 27 Quick-start tutorials and videos on how to use Media
* 78 Pre-built sample scripts to copy-paste into your own projects
* 13 Example stacks for you to use, modify, and take apart
* 377 page PDF User's Guide
* Full-featured, easy to learn English-like scripting language


Rev Media imports a broad spectrum of media formats -- GIF, JPG, PNG (for images), WAV, AIF (etc. for audio, although weird sampling rates on WAV don't work well), and QuickTime -- and thus make the product ideal for rich media presentations.

If I didn't already own an Enterprise license, I'd take advantage of this offer pronto! This product offers so many more advantages (short of the included stock media) than Hyperstudio that I still fail to understand the death-grip the latter has on the education market (probably it's that the older people with Ph.D.'s in education remember how horrific learning to program used to be back in the medieval period that they simply shy away from anything that promotes the "P" word... but that doesn't mean that the rest of us need to be dinosaurs, right?!).

Sunday, November 16, 2008

HyperStudio's Back!

And you might be wondering why that's a good thing(tm) as far as promoting Revolution is concerned, but it really is.

Roger Wagner is back as well, which will probably reassure those veteran educators who were fond of Hyperstudio and despaired of ever using it again.

Near as I can tell, it's still no Hypercard, much less Revolution, but boasts features that neither of the other two ever had or have yet, including kerning, web deployment (sure to delight the web-ueber-alles crowd, although the required plug-in appears to be Safari-specific), podcasting and webcam support, etc. And while the company's motto is "We know where your Mac wants to go,"  there are both Mac as well as Windows versions of the software. You can download a free stack Player for OS X versions of stacks created with the current version as well as an OS X player for legacy stacks made in versions 3 and 4. Mac OS 9 and Windows Players are also available, which is good news for those educators operating in legacy environments or using Windows.

HyperStudio seems to still utilize the stack-card metaphor, which is why its release is a good thing for Revolution, which also utilizes the stack-card metaphor; this could make it easier for HyperStudio users to feel comfortable investigating Revolution.

And why might they want to investigate Revolution? Because HyperStudio still lacks a scripting language, which means that, despite its wonderful new features, it is still a cross between PowerPoint and KidPix (the latter of which the company also sells). Revolution still wins hands-down for its natural-language scripting language which allows educators to easily create custom applications, including interactive fiction, testing software, and other media-rich software.

HyperStudio-loving educators who use Windows might want to make a foray into the Mac side, as the Macintosh version of HyperStudio is considerably beefier in terms of the out-of-the-box experience. The Mac version boasts more than 1,300 included clipart images as opposed to the 500 or so images included in the Windows version, and nearly double the number of animations as well (the number of included sounds and movies for both versions is the same; however, the Mac version includes what the company calls "semi-3D QTVR" movies).

The Mac "side" also boasts a greater number of export formats, including JPG, MOV, M4V (movie clips for iPod and iPhone), HTML, while the Windows side only exports to BMP, HTML and the standalone player that both can utilize.

Requirements. The Mac version can run on either PPC G4 or Intel processors, and requires 256 MB RAM and Mac OS 10.4.11 or newer. For Windows, you will Windows XP or later, a 600 MHz Intel-based processor and 256 MB of RAM.

A single license costs US$89.95. On the basis of the price point, however, Revolution still wins out, with RevMedia, which also requires a player (as opposed to being able to compile a standalone, which later versions of HyperCard and all versions of Revolution Studio or higher can do) costing a mere US$49.00.