Multimedia basics

By Weixel, Suzanne · Published by Boston, Mass. : Thomson/Course Technology · 2004-01-01T00:00:00Z · Language: eng · 226 views
Source: Internet Archive Format: PDF High School (9–12)
Multimedia systems Computer graphics Computer animation Business presentations Desktop publishing Web site development

"Multimedia basics" is a PDF drawn from the Internet Archive and catalogued under Computer Science for High School (9–12). From the source: 1 volume (various pagings) : 28 cm "For 75+ hours of instruction"--Cover Includes index Graphics unit -- Creating Graphics -- Understand Vector and Bitmap Graphics -- Create, Save, and Close a Graphics File -- Open… Slide Collection preserves the upstream link, the original creator credit and the licensing terms; download the file to use it in a classroom, study group or revision plan.

About this presentation

1 volume (various pagings) : 28 cm "For 75+ hours of instruction"--Cover Includes index Graphics unit -- Creating Graphics -- Understand Vector and Bitmap Graphics -- Create, Save, and Close a Graphics File -- Open an Existing Graphics File -- Use Drawing Tools -- Select Stroke and Fill Options -- Change the View -- Modify the Drawing Area -- Print a Drawing -- Importing and Exporting Graphics -- Scan Images -- Acquire Images from a Digital Camera -- Import Files -- Open Different File Formats -- Acquire Clip Art -- Optimize and Export Images -- Modifying Graphics -- Work with Bitmap Images -- Reshape Vector Paths -- Position and Align Objects -- Group and Stack Objects -- Scale Objects -- Skew and Distort Objects -- Rotate and Flip Objects -- Copy Objects -- Crop an Image -- Adding Text To Graphics -- Create a Text Object -- Check Spelling -- Apply Character Formatting -- Set Text Direction and Alignment -- Apply Fills and Strokes to Text -- Import Text -- Transform a Text Block -- Convert Text to Vector Graphics -- Creating Special Effects -- Work with Color -- Apply Color Effects -- Apply Color Correction Effects -- Apply Special Effects -- Save Custom Effects -- Edit and Remove Effects -- Create Masks -- Animation and Video unit -- Creating Animations -- Explore an Animation Program -- Create a New Animation -- Insert Content in a Frame -- Add and Delete Frames and Keyframes -- Create Frame-by-Frame Animation -- Preview an Animation -- Create Motion and Path Animation -- Use Layers -- Copy or Move a Frame or Frame Series -- View Multiple Frames -- Test a Movie -- Enhancing Animations -- Record a Sound File -- Edit a Sound File -- Import and Add Sound in Animations -- Add and Animate Text -- Insert Buttons in an Animation -- Use Action Scripts -- Publishing an Animation -- Analyze a Movie File -- Optimize a Movie -- Publish a Movie -- Publish a Movie for Web Delivery -- Publish a Movie to Animated or Static Graphics -- Publish a Movie to an Executable -- Publish a Movie to QuickTime -- Working with Video -- Set Up a Video Project -- Capture Video from an External Source -- Import Video Sources from Other Digital Media -- Create and Preview a Video -- Edit Video -- Enhancing Video -- Add Effects -- Add Transitions -- Add Titles -- Add Audio -- Publishing Video -- Publish to a Movie File -- Publish to a DVD or VCD -- Publish to a Digital Videotape -- Publish to an Analog Videotape -- Publish a Single Frame of the Video as a Still Image -- Presentation Systems Unit -- Working with Presentations -- Explore the PowerPoint Window -- Open and Save an Existing Presentation -- Change the Presentation View -- Navigate in a Presentation -- Apply a Design Template -- Add Slides to a Presentation -- Work with Text -- Check Spelling -- Set Transitions -- Preview a Presentation -- Enhancing a Presentation -- Create and Save a Presentation -- Delete, Duplicate, and Reorganize Slides -- Change Font, Font Size, and Other Attributes -- Change Text Alignment -- Format Lists -- Adjust Line Spacing -- Adjust Text Size with AutoFit -- Check Styles -- Work with Design Template Colors -- Change the Slide Background -- Change Formatting on Slide Masters -- Working with Graphic Objects -- Insert Clip Art -- Insert Pictures from Other Sources -- Format Images -- Draw Your Own Objects -- Manipulate Objects and Graphics -- Add a Table -- Create a Chart -- Create a Diagram -- Working with Sound and Animations -- Insert a Sound Object -- Record Narration -- Import Movies -- Use an Animation Scheme -- Customize Animations -- Creating Support Materials -- Use Notes Pages -- Prepare Audience Handouts -- Print an Outline -- Create Overheads and 35mm Slides -- Export Notes, Handouts, or an Outline to Word -- Giving a Presentation -- Final Preparation Work before the Presentation -- Deliver On-Screen Presentations -- Deliver Online Presentations -- Desktop Publishing Unit -- Working with Documents -- Plan a Publication -- Create a New File -- Save, Close, and Reopen a Document -- Change the Document View -- Add and Edit Text -- Save Changes to al File -- Insert a Picture -- Check Spelling -- Preview and Print a Document -- Working with Text -- Create a Blank Document -- Work with Text Boxes -- Work with Fonts -- Align Text -- Set Indents and Tabs and Create Lists -- Adjust Spacing -- Copy, Move, and Import Text -- Control Text Flow -- Formatting Pages -- Set up Pages -- Set Guides -- Use Master Pages -- Insert Page Numbers -- Insert and Delete Pages -- Create a Template -- Apply a Color Scheme and Font Scheme -- Use Styles -- Working with Objects -- Identify Types of Objects -- Draw Shapes -- Modify Fills and Strokes -- Acquire Objects -- Size and Crop Objects -- Position and Arrange Objects -- Set Text Wrap -- Enhancing Publications -- Work with Color -- Enhance Objects -- Enhance Text -- Insert Horizontal Rules -- Apply Border Art -- Create a Watermark -- Use Design Objects -- Publishing a Document -- Plan for Publication -- Perform Prepress Checks -- Set Properties for Desktop Printing -- Enable Trapping -- Prepare a Composite and Color Separations -- Save a File for Commercial Printing -- Deliver Files to a Commercial Printer -- Web Site Development Unit -- Creating a Web Page -- How the Web Is Organized -- Find Web Sites and Web Pages -- Create HTML Web Site Folders -- Use a Text Editor to Enter HTML Structural Tags -- Save HTML Text Documents -- View a Web Page -- Modify a Web Page -- Format Text with HTML Tags -- Formatting and Linking Web Site Pages -- How Web Sites Are Structured -- Center Text -- Add Horizontal Lines -- Change Font Face -- Apply a Consistent Look and Feel to Web Pages -- Create Hyperlinks on Web Pages -- Create Lists on Web Pages -- Add Multiple Pages to a Web Site -- Adding Color, Graphics, and Animation to Web Pages -- Change Text Colors -- Change Page Background Color -- Experiment with Web-Safe Colors -- Change Link Colors -- Acquire and Insert Graphics -- Align Graphics -- Insert an Animated GIF -- Hyperlink a Graphic -- Change Graphic Borders -- Working in a Web Site Design Program -- Explore Your Web Site Design Software -- Define a Web Site -- View a Web Site -- Add Content to the Web Site -- Create a Navigation Structure in a Web Site Design Program -- Polishing and Publishing Your Web Site -- Change Page Background Properties -- Modify Page Properties Throughout a Site -- Add a Random Navigation System -- Test Links and Page Properties -- Prepare to Publish a Site -- Publish a Site -- Team Collaboration with Other Applications -- Integrated Projects -- The Windows Operating System

How to study this deck

Computer-science slides are deceptively dense. Code snippets and diagrams collapse hours of design decisions into a few lines, so resist the urge to skim. Run the snippets locally, change one variable, and observe what breaks.

High-school audiences can handle the full vocabulary and most of the formal reasoning, but the deck still benefits from explicit "why does this matter?" framing at section breaks.

Five questions to test your understanding

  1. What is the single most important claim on the first three slides, and what evidence is offered for it?
  2. Which slide could you remove without losing the argument? Which slide is load-bearing?
  3. Where does the deck switch from definitions to applications? Mark that transition.
  4. What would a student who already disagreed with the conclusion need to see to be convinced?
  5. Which two slides, if combined, would give the clearest one-slide summary of the whole deck?

Where this deck fits in the wider catalogue

Slide Collection classifies this presentation under Computer Science, alongside other openly-licensed material in the same subject. If you are preparing a unit at the High School (9–12) level, the dedicated combined Computer Science · High School (9–12) page is the fastest way to find adjacent decks with the same audience in mind.

Citation & reuse

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