LBSC 690 Project
The project in LBSC 690 is designed to allow students to integrate and
extend knowledge acquired throughout the course and to apply that
knowledge to solve a problem of substantial scope. Students are
required to work in groups of 3, and teams should plan to devote
approximately 125 hours outside of class to the project over the
course of the semester (6 hours per person for 7 weeks). Except in
unusual circumstances, all team members should be registered for the
same section of LBSC 690. Experience suggests that successful teams
require expertise in design, implementation, and project management.
Immediately following the midterm exam, project groups will meet in
class to nail down the details of their planned project. Each team
will then make a 5 minute presentation the following week to solicit
feedback on their plans from other members of the class. Each team
will produce a single written report, due on December 11, and will
present a 30-minute demonstration of their project by appointment on
Thursday December 11 or Saturday December 13.
The Teaching Assistants will be available for consultation with
project teams during Tuesday and Thursday afternoon lab sessions, and
both the professor and the teaching assistants will also be available
by appointment. Because project teams will be working with a diverse
array of technologies and application environments, this assistance
will necessarily focus more on strategies than details.
Projects are required to make substantial use of at least two of the
key technologies introduced in the course, integrated in a manner that
is appropriate for their intended application:
- Web-based content delivery
- Synchronized multimedia content delivery
- Programming (JavaScript)
- Relational Databases
Projects are also required to include significant real content;
mock-ups that contain only a limited quantity of content for
demonstration purposes would not be acceptable.
An email describing my expectations for the
paper is now available.
Teams should discuss their project plans with the professor no later
than the planning session following the midterm exam. It is important
that the chosen project be sufficiently substantial to represent a
significant accomplishment, but that it not be so complex that
completion within the available time would be unlikely. Teams may
select any topic for their project, but they should be careful to
select a project for which the required content can be obtained in the
available time. The following topics are offered as examples:
Apollo Archives
The Apollo missions to the moon, flown between 1968 and 1972, were the
most extensively documented voyages of exploration ever conducted.
Thanks to the efforts of a number of enthusiasts and companies, many
of these records are now available in digital form. Each item
documents one aspect of an event, but achieving a holistic
understanding often requires simultaneous access to multiple
perspectives. For example, recordings (and/or transcripts) are
available from the control center, the spacecraft, and the radio
transmissions between the two. Photographs are available from as many
as five cameras at one time. There are a lot of interesting aspects
of this problem that could be explored, and several application
environments that might be considered (scholarly access, school
library media centers, museum visitors, ...). Probably the best way
to start is to check out http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/frame.html
to get to know some of the available content. If you are interested
in this project, you should also see me to discuss digitized audio and
video that is available from other sources.
Oral History
Students at the Saint Andrews Episcopal School in Potomac, MD create
oral histories as part of their studies. They presently make
transcripts of those oral histories available at http://www.DoingOralHistory.org.
The school is interested in working with a local university to also
make the audio from the interviews available as streaming media. This
could involve synchronized delivery of audio and the video (see http://www.uaf.edu/library/oralhistory/jukebox/pjhome.htm
for an example) or a less tightly coupled approach (see http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/1968/
for an example of that.
The most exceptional project of the semester may be nominated for the
Deans Award.
Doug Oard
Last modified: Tue Nov 18 21:30:07 2003