Archive for the ‘Announcements’ Category

Introducing The Quad

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

quad-q-full-sm

Bettendorf Public Library is bringing a fresh start to our young adult services. The Quad is a brand new teen center built around the multimedia needs of today’s youth. It will be at the heart of our young adult community and represents our focus on the four main values of the Quad: Reading, Learning, Entertaining and Growing.

The Quad is a dynamic space where teens can use their library their way. They will be able to study, research, hang out, have fun, and best of all—read! We are excited about the new opportunities the Quad will present us with in the future. We hope you are too.

The Quad will launch during Teen Read Week, October 17th—23rd. Watch for details about our grand opening and special activities planned for that week.

Below is a video depicting the initial conception of the Quad. You will have to visit our grand opening to see all the wonderful improvements we have made on the final design of our new teen center!

Nerdposium Spotlight: Chip Music

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Jared was extremely helpful in introducing us to chiptunes, or chip music. What is chip music? In brief it is the act of using audio information from game consoles such as the original Game Boy or NES to create new music.

Here is an example of chip music (the song is Thriller from the late Micheal Jackson):

The artist above, Saitone, has many game consoles and a mixer to produce music in real time. While it sounds like video games of the 1980’s, these systems are creating something new and unique. Chip music is the epitome of remix culture, they take an outdated video game console and turn it into a musical instrument.

How do you make chip music? For beginners you can download emulators that represent the sound chip that was originally on the Game Boy or NES.

Famitracker is a good example. You can download it for free here.

And this is what Famitracker looks like (a theme from Megaman 9):

Each piece of information corresponds to a note on an instrument. It can seem quite daunting but is actually quite fun when you sit down to tinker with it. Try it out and let us know what awesome music you create!

Jared’s Suggested Sites:

famitracker:

http://famitracker.shoodot.net/

sites:

http://sound.jp/xinon/
http://8bitcollective.com/
http://www.myspace.com/saitone

videos:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYBHpN6gSTw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wM31lsU0Gpc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2s8u_erLWQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJlvLEY2vZ0
http://www.myspace.com/fighterxtreme

$5000 Video Game Grant from Best Buy

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Breaking News:

BPL has recieved a $5000 grant from Best Buy for video game tournaments, materials, and collection development.

Come out this Thursday to our Wii Free Play at 3:30pm and express your excitement!

Have any ideas for tournaments or games to play? Let us know in the comments!

Free audiobook of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom fan-reading from Podiobooks – Boing Boing.

Do you know what Creative Commons licenses are? These licenses allow author and other creative artists to legally allow their works to be distributed and sometimes remixed in other media.

Cory Doctorow is a strong proponent of Creative Commons and usually releases his novels under their licenses. Here is a fan made audio book of his classic Down and Out in the Magic Kingodom.

The book is broken down into 8 mp3 files so it should work on personal media players, including iPods.

Drawing Inspiration

Friday, August 8th, 2008

I thought it would be nice to order a few titles for the YA collection that might inspire artwork for the upcoming manga contest.  In browsing the selection on Amazon.com, I came across a few good titles that, to my surprise, are already part of DPL’s collection.  Take a look at these selections, complete with product descriptions from Amazon.  As always, feel free to place a hold on the item by clicking on the link which takes you straight to the catalog record.  Happy drawing!

Making Comics by Scott McCloud–Designed as a craftsperson’s overview of the drawing and storytelling decisions and possibilities available to comics artists, covering everything from facial expressions and page layout to the choice of tools and story construction, Making Comics, like its predecessors, is also an eye-opening trip behind the scenes of art-making, fascinating for anyone reading comics as well as those making them.

Manga Mania Fantasy Worlds by Christopher Hart–Manga fantasy is the swords-and-sorcery Japanese animation style featured in the most popular video role-playing games on the market. Best-selling author Christopher Hart’s latest tutorial reveals the secrets and techniques that go into building these worlds of wonder. An increasingly fashionable style among both digital and traditional animators, manga enjoys unrivaled popularity among the game players themselves, allowing them entry into fabled worlds of startling beauty, terror, and adventure. Manga Mania Fantasy Worlds throws down the gauntlet for people interested in creating these scenes for themselves. Artists will learn how to illustrate detailed backdrops and landscapes, rugged weaponry, and, of course, fearsome creatures-aliens, faeries, ogres, and much more. In the straightforward style that is his trademark, Christopher Hart teaches the basics and the intricacies of creating manga fantasy illustrations that practically jump off the page.

50 Fantasy Vehicles to Draw & Paint: Create Awe-Inspiring Crafts for Comics, Computer Games, and Graphic Novels by Keith Thompson–The great popularity of fantasy and science fiction themes in films, books, graphic novels, and computer games has created a continuing demand for artists who can conceptualize and draw convincing space ships of tomorrow, as well as other fantasy vehicles such as cars, tanks, and sea-going vessels of the future. In this book, artist and designer Keith Thompson presents a practical course for art students. He starts with advice on finding research and reference materials, and then advises on using them as inspiration before sketching out original ideas for finished illustrations. The book’s extensive main section presents a “mechanical workshop” of fantasy designs for students to copy and adapt to their own story needs and specifications. It gives attention to the techniques of drawing, shading, and coloring. The author analyzes each of the book’s fantasy vehicles in terms of how and why artists came to their final design, how well the vehicles fit into the story being told, and how they would move, sound, and perform. Clear instruction is supplemented with more than 400 vivid, step-by-step color illustrations of sample projects.

The Fantasy Illustrator’s Technique Book by Gary A. Lippincott–Here is a heavily illustrated, highly detailed instruction manual for art students seeking professional entry in the fantasy art field. The author guides students from conception of an art idea to publication of the finished work, emphasizing methods for creating magical, mythical, and monstrous characters who inhabit worlds of fantasy and wonder.  More than 350 color illustrations.