Television
Here below is a link to an old school TV show called MASH:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAhjRgbzEu0
This show was shot using video cameras.

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Television
Here below is a link to an old school TV show called MASH:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAhjRgbzEu0
This show was shot using video cameras.
CLEAN YOUR PLATE
Let’s face it. Food waste is a global shame. Especially in a world where billions of people are starving. They say that there is enough food in the world for everyone, but don’t let that fool you. Over 1.3 billion tons of food is lost each year and that is equivalent to at least one-third of all of it, and unless we take action, this will devastate our planet. One of the leading countries that waste food is US. Undoubtedly, the Western world's overconsumption of food is affecting global food prices: The more they consume (and the more they throw out), the greater global demand for food becomes – and the higher food prices rise globally. Let's imagine a pile of bananas, grown and produced in a developing country, transported all the way across the globe to a Western country just to be wasted because of some silly cosmetic reason. People in the very same developing country lack food. Imagine looking those hungry people in the eyes and telling them that the good bananas grown in their very own country are being thrown away just as fast they arrive in the Western world. We Filipinos are not without fault either. Each Filipino waste an average of 3.29kg/year, according to the Food and Nutrition Research Institute of the Department of Science and Technology (FNRI-DOST). With the same amount, more than 2 million Filipinos could have been fed. This is just in terms of rice, excluding the other kinds of food and resources we waste. Unless proper interventions are made, this vicious cycle can go on for years. So how do we solve this crisis? It’s simple. Stop wasting food. Don’t buy more than what you need, don’t overstuff your plate if you know you could only finish half of it, eat and cook leftovers, share with your neighbors, and be creative about it. We’re the ones who started this so it’s only fair that we should be the ones to end it.
Visit to Flinders University
I arrived in Adelaide Wednesday evening and was met by Kevin Knox, Manager of Digital Media Services at Flinders University Adelaide. I first met Kevin when he was in the UK on study leave and he presented at the SCHOMS conference held at Aberystwyth in 2009. This morning Kevin explained what his team does, I was very interested in their in house developed lecture capture system and hope that Kevin will say more on that. We then went on a campus walk about and visited several spaces but some were in use so unable to wander around them. Later on I was taken to some other new areas by Scott and Warren who work in the DMS team. The ubiquitious problem of late or lack of consultation on the design of spaces is present at Flinders although they have seen recent improvements on this front. Some pictures. This picture will resonate with many who are adopting lecture capture. This notice is present at the 45 locations that lecture capture takes place.
This picture is of windows in the side of a lecture theatre at the Education building from the outside. You will see that the blinds are down. This is because they are west facing and the sun blazes through and heats the space. It is a shame as the idea is good. It would have enabled people using the pathway outside to see any activity happening in the lecture theatre and those inside to have daylight and see passersby.
The seating can be withdrawn and is known as the multipurpose centre so an adaptable or reconfigurable space.
This shows the use of colour in the stairwell of the Health Sciences building. It lifts the feel of what I think would have been an uninteresting space looks good.
I liked this room with its great natural daylight and view of the trees. However it is also a video conferencing suite and the picture is taken as if from the video camera. This has presented problems even when the blinds are closed due to light spillage at the edges of the blinds. This scenario resulted from the media services team not being involved at the concept stage and those designing the room not understanding the effect the light would have on the VC. There are a few solutions: Better blackout or move the camera through 90 degrees.
I think it is a very nice meeting room though.
This picture is in a 300 seat lecture in the Health Sciences building. It is a very nice well equipped theatre.
I particularly liked the central tablet provision which addresses the problem providing for left and right handed people. Left handers are often not catered for. I have visited four lecture theatres on my travels with a combined capacity of approx. 1000 and no provision for left hand students. This is 110 students based on 11% of people being left handed. Some studies have the figure as high as 15%
Is the writing surface doing its job here? The picture is taken from the back of the room. I couldn't read what was written on the board. As you can see there is a document camera available but writing surfaces were insisted upon. I know many places where this happens and wonder how students at the back of such a scenario manage. There are spaces at Aberystwyth that have this issue. Do others have a policy about this?
This is a picture of the lectern. I am not sure of the purpose of the purple panel on the front. However it does raise some design issues. Look at the next picture.
This is the view that students get from the first 5 rows if a vertically challenged person such as me is teaching i.e. just a head.
I refer back to the blog about gender. Women are generally shorter than men. This scenario also impacts upon a lecturer in a wheelchair.
I am visiting city centre rooms later.