Friday, December 10, 2010

Call to Cairo: The night has a thousand eyes


Call to Cairo from Oliver Wilkins on Vimeo.

Francis William Bourdillon (22 March 1852 – 13 January 1921) was a British poet and translator best known for his poem “The Night Has A Thousand Eyes.” While the poem speaks about the power of love, the first line “The night has a thousand eyes” fits so nicely with this time lapse view of Cairo, Egypt by night. Anyway, Bourdillon’s poem goes like this:

The night has a thousand eyes,
And the day but one;
Yet the light of the bright world dies
With the dying of the sun.

The mind has a thousand eyes,
And the heart but one;
Yet the light of a whole life dies
When love is done.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Writing for the Web (tips and techniques)

Great, useful research by Internet guru Jakob Nielsen from “Alertbox: Current Issues in Web Usability” on how users read on the Web and how authors should write their Web pages. Numerous topics include:

  1. How users read on the Web
  2. How little do users read? - users spend 4.4 seconds for every extra 100 words on a page
  3. F-shaped pattern for reading web content, as seen in eyetracking studies
  4. American English vs. British English
  5. Twitter Postings: Iterative Design
  6. Writing style for print vs. Web
  7. Write inverted pyramids in cyberspace
  8. Eyetracking of people reading email newsletters
  9. Low-literacy users exhibit different behaviors
  10. PR and press releases on corporate websites (103 design guidelines based on usability studies of how journalists visit company sites)
  11. Blah-blah text: Keep, cut, or kill?
  12. Email newsletters (165 design guidelines: scannability even more important than for websites)
  13. Writing transactional email and confirmation messages
  14. Long vs. short articles as content strategy
  15. Microcontent: writing headlines, page titles, and email subject lines
  16. Teenagers on the Web: poor reading skills and low patience levels mean that text has to be ultra-concise for teens and that more information must be communicated in images
  17. Tagline blues: what’s the site about?
  18. Passive voice is redeemed for Web headings
  19. World's Best Headlines: BBC News
  20. Use old keywords when writing to be found by search users
  21. Show numbers as numerals when writing for online readers
  22. Nanocontent: the first two words of links and titles
  23. Company name first in microcontent? Sometimes!
  24. Kindle Content Design (writing for Amazon.com’s e-book reader)
  25. iPad and Kindle Reading Speeds
  26. Information pollution
  27. Distributing Content Through Social Networks and RSS (Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn, and RSS)
  28. Corporate Blogs: Front Page Structure
  29. Intranet usability, including guidelines for intranet content, news on intranets, HR manuals, and how to present information about projects, teams, and individuals on intranets
  30. Full paper documenting the original research from 1997 (long): Concise, SCANNABLE, and Objective: How to Write for the Web (unfortunately this paper was written for print and not online)
  31. Case study: Applying Writing Guidelines to Web Pages improved usability by 159% when rewriting sample pages from a popular website
  32. How to write “About Us” pages for a company's or organization’s website

Monday, March 1, 2010

Free online books library for students, teachers, and the classic enthusiast

Read Print offers over 8,000 absolutely free online books by 3,500 authors at your fingertips. Warning: The surgeon general reports that having these many free books at your disposal can be highly addictive.

Top Authors: Agatha Christie, Charles Dickens, Edgar Allan Poe, George Orwell, Jane Austen, Louisa May Alcott, Mark Twain, O Henry, Oscar Wilde, Robert Frost, William Shakespeare

Top Books: 1984, Animal Farm, Hamlet, Jane Eyre, Paradise Lost, Peter Pan, Pride and Prejudice, The Canterbury Tales, The Great Gatsby, The Invisible Man

Categories: Essays, Fiction, Non-Fiction, Plays, Poetry, Short Stories

Browse by author’s last name: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y

Friday, February 26, 2010

Liberty’s thoughts

Liberty Rose Ayon was one of my Advanced Composition students a month ago. Besides the article posted below, you can read other entries in her blog.

my poignant reality (December 24, 2007, 6:15 AM)

i think the Christmas Spirit has gone somewhere but visit me

i can't help but feel nothing

a few months before the calendar showed December, i felt a little apprehensive for i kind of expect what this month will be for me...i am once again feeling and living the real-what-my-life-is...believe it or not, but behind this smiling eyes are tears roaming just around the corner...
i am really sad...

sad that i won't be spending this Christmas Eve with my mom and dad...

sad knowing that my big brother will be spending his Christmas Eve alone too...

sad that i am not even brave enough to let my tears show...

sad that i dare not even talk about and with the 'elephant in the room'

sad that i have to end and remember this year marked with a broken friendship

sad that separation is a reality way too painful

sad that i am sad

yet, i know that Christmas is not about emotions and capturing all the shiny glittering lights engulf you into feeling that wonderful Christmas Spirit...Christmas is more than that...it is remembering how God showed His love by giving Jesus to us...Jesus, Who came as a Babe to become the Man that will die on the cross for our sins...

God must have been sad too to let His Son leave Him and come to this world...

i have to feel this now though...ignoring this feeling would just lengthen this state...

but like everything else in this world, this will end too...

this will end
...