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Digital Humanities Initiative

The CUNY Digital Humanities Initiative (CUNY DHI), launched in Fall 2010, aims to build connections and community among those at CUNY who are applying digital technologies to scholarship and pedagogy in the humanities. All are welcome: faculty, students, and technologists, experienced practitioners and beginning DHers, enthusiasts and skeptics.

We meet regularly on- and offline to explore key topics in the Digital Humanities, and share our work, questions, and concerns. See our blog for more information on upcoming events (it’s also where we present our group’s work to a wider audience). Help edit the CUNY Digital Humanities Resource Guide, our first group project. And, of course, join the conversation on the Forum.

Photo credit: Digital Hello by hugoslv on sxc.hu.

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Upcoming Event: Mapping the Universe and Other Small Things: The Quest for Story-Based Exploratory L

  • Join us as Curtis Wong deconstructs a number of critically acclaimed interactive media projects across vastly different topics including music, art, astronomy, history, economics, cultural history, physics, and data visualizing to reveal a common information architecture for mapping compelling and engaging interactive story-based exploratory learning.

    WHEN: FRIDAY OCTOBER 3, 10 am.
    WHERE: Science Center, Room 4102, Graduate Center, CUNY, 365 Fifth Avenue NY NY 10010
    Seating capacity limited (no reservations)

    See the Facebook event for more details: https://www.facebook.com/events/935659349782623/



    Curtis Wong, Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research, is responsible for basic and applied research in media and interaction. He has been granted more than 50 patents in areas such as data visualization, user interaction, interactive television, media browsing and automated cinematography. He is also co-author of Microsoft’s 5,000th patent in 2006 and 10,000th patent in 2009.

    Recently, Curtis has led the effort to enable interactive spatial temporal data visualization as a broad capability for everyone to gain insight into the growing tide of data that is being generated from devices and services. This work, codenamed Project GeoFlow, will be released as part of Excel 2013 as Power Map and is Microsoft’s first geospatial temporal data visualization application for the broad market.

    Previously, Curtis conceived and developed Project Tuva in collaboration with Bill Gates to make the Messenger Series Lectures by acclaimed Nobel Prize winning theoretical physicist Richard P. Feynman freely available over the Internet. Tuva features an innovative interactive player with links to simulations and detailed reference information directly from key points in the lecture. Project TUVA was a WEBBY Award finalist 2011 in the intensely competitive Best Video on the Web category.

    In 2008 Curtis fulfilled a lifelong goal to create the WorldWide Telescope (WWT), which is a free, rich interactive virtual simulation of the visible Universe to enable kids of all ages to explore and understand the Universe. Curtis worked closely with WWT’s Principal Architect and Engineer Jonathan Fay to create WWT’s integrated rich media authoring, animation, and playback engine to allow anyone to produce rich interactive guided tours of the Universe. WWT guided tours look like HD movies with narration, music, graphics, text, and animation but are fully interactive at any time with embedded links to information sources all over the Web. The tours are created by moving a virtual camera through the rich 3D environment to define paths that are rendered in real time within the rich visual environment from the highest resolution images from ground and space based telescopes. WWT has enabled more than ten million kids of all ages from every continent on Earth to explore the Universe and learn about astronomy from scientists and educators. WWT is installed in the Hayden Planetarium in New York, The Adler Planetarium in Chicago and the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco and other cities to enable interactive exploration of the Universe by the public. WorldWide Telescope was launched at the TED Conference in 2008 and featured at TEDxCalTech in 2011.

    Curtis has spent some of his time working with non-profits to develop examples of next generation educational media such as his collaboration PBS. He worked with WGBH Frontline to produce The Age of AIDS on the global AIDS pandemic in 2006 and the broadband enhanced documentary Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy, winning a 2002 British Academy Award for Online Learning and nominated for the first interactive TV Emmy. The President of PBS presented Commanding Heights to Congress in 2002 as an example of the future of public broadcasting interactive educational programming on the Web.

    Prior to Microsoft in 1998, Curtis was Director of Intel Productions in Silicon Valley where he conceived and developed http://www.artmuseum.net (no longer available) the first Broadband blockbuster art museum exhibition network on the Web. The site featured faithful 3D recreations of concurrent art exhibitions in major museums, such as American Century Exhibition at the Whitney Museum, Van Gogh’s Van Goghs at The National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, and the Virtual Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. Visitors to the virtual museum could see the same guided tour as in the museum and closely examine the works of art with related letters and drawings for context as well as text chat with other visitors, take photos from anywhere in the virtual museum and email them to friends via an electronic post card with an invitation to visit the museum.

    Curtis was also responsible for creation of the first enhanced digital television program broadcast in the United States: Frank Lloyd Wright—The Poetry of Structure accompanying the national PBS broadcast of the Ken Burns film on Frank Lloyd Wright. The interactive program followed the film and featured interactive guided tours of the Guggenheim, Unity Temple, and Falling Water led by Eric Lloyd Wright.

    Prior to Intel, Curtis was General Manager of Corbis Productions, where he was responsible for the creation of a critically acclaimed series of CD-ROMs including: A Passion for Art, Critical Mass, FDR, and Leonardo da Vinci which collectively won dozens of awards and critical acclaim in the NY Times and the NY Times Book Review. Walt Mossberg’s Personal Technology column in the Wall St Journal’s called A Passion for Art the “greatest CD-ROM of any kind to cross my desk since the multimedia revolution began” and NPR’s All Things Considered featured A Passion for Art which was likely the first and last time a CD-ROM was demonstrated on the radio!

    Before Corbis, Curtis was a producer for the Criterion Collection where he created special editions of major feature films on laserdisc winning Video Magazine’s top award for The Last Picture Show and Jason and the Argonauts. He produced other special editions of films on laserdisc including: The Great Escape, Bad Day at Black Rock, Citizen Kane, Goldfinger, and The Devil and Daniel Webster. Curtis was also an interactive producer for the Voyager Company (the other side of Criterion) where he was responsible for the group producing Multimedia Beethoven, Amanda Stories, and Pedro Meyer’s I Photograph to Remember, which were three of the first ten multimedia CD-ROMs for Windows and the first multimedia CD-ROM title from Microsoft in 1991.

    Curtis is an honorary professor of histories and humanities at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Curtis has served on the board of trustees for the Seattle Art Museum for the past decade, on the advisory board for national PBS Kids for the past eight years, an advisor to the Director of the Barnes Foundation, an advisor to the Getty Foundation and the Getty Conservation Institute, an advisor to the Experience Music Project museum, the All Stars Orchestra, and other cultural organizations.

    Curtis has previously served as a trustee of the Rhode Island School of Design, and advisory boards for Ovation — The Arts Network, PBS Online, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the Canadian Film Centre, and the American Film Institute. He is included in Richard Saul Wurman’s book, Who’s Really Who: 1000 Most Creative Individuals in the USA and has been invited to speak about his work at the Aspen Ideas Festival, the TED conference in 1997, 1999, 2008 and TEDx CalTech in 2011.

    Curtis’s work has received numerous industry awards including the first Interactive Television Emmy nomination in 2002, a British Academy Award, New York Film Festivals Gold Medals 1995, 1996, 1997, ID (International Design) Magazine’s Interactive Design Review 1997, Communication Arts Interactive Design Annual 1996 & 1997, many New Media Invision Gold awards, Time Magazine’s Best of the Web 1997. The WorldWide Telescope was awarded the ID (International Design) Magazine Annual Design Review, Best of Category: Interactive and AIGA Certificate of Excellence in Design and Time Magazine’s 50 best of the Web in 2008.

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