Digital media strategist and consultant.

Tyr Energy Corporate Website

Posted: April 1st, 2004 | Author: Cameron | Filed under: Design, Flash, Web | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

During the summer of 2003 I worked as interim IT director and web and print producer for Tyr Energy, Inc, an upstart energy management firm in the suburbs of Kansas City. As a rapidly growing company with very large growth potential, it proved to be a challenging, fun, exciting and engaging position.

This site was produced in the first month of work at Tyr as their first Internet presence. It employs the assertiveness of the Tyr logo and is similarly minimalist in its design. As a consultanting firm for large energy corporations, its site was purely an extension of marketing materials and the content reflects this. Simple Flash animation is also utilized in content navigation to provide some movement in conjunction with the “onward, upward” arrow motif.

A mirror of the site as of April, 2004 is provided below. Please note that some pages are omitted due to copyright.

Tyr Energy, Inc. Link.


From the Ground Up: krlx.org

Posted: February 13th, 2004 | Author: Cameron | Filed under: Design, Flash, New Media, Web | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

krlxmini.png

After assuming the position of Producer at KRLX-FM in Northfield, MN, I went straight to work building it’s web presence, then non-existent. By 2003 it was painfully clear that the station needed to incorporate digital content into its repertoire in order to remain relevant in a student sea of early adopters. Burgeoning digital music libraries and portable media were already beginning to threaten the very paradigm that college radio was founded upon and it was no time to be standing still.

It became clear to me that two essential components would work as an extension of both new media’s and radio’s inherent qualities:

  1. Accessibility
  2. Locality

The web could provide unprecedented access to media beyond simulcasts (audio streaming, in this case) including accompanying photographs, summaries, and packaged audio (later, podcasts). In addition, the strength of radio as a local resource, that is a unique and timely community-centric viewpoint, could give it a distinct advantage over static digital media and information services from other locales.

It occurred to me, from my own perspectives on media and from research into other methods that had been employed with community and public broadcasting, that two distinct interfaces could co-exist. The radio and telephone delivery and feedback mechanism worked but was in some ways outmoded, clumsy and sometimes overly personal. If content was to stream on the web there had to be a feedback mechanism that is entirely web-based, instant and comfortably removed yet able to communicate the essentials. Thus,

  • Site-wide commenting at the program, episode and track level
  • Instant, web-based feedback mechanism
  • Easy access to playlists and logs
  • Familiar blog-based program presentation
  • RSS / Podcast delivery of programs
  • Portal style presentation of program offerings (including iTunes)
  • Searchable, dynamic achives

My role in the site was from conception through design, with a team of talented programmers working to build functionality through several different open source CMS platforms including NucleusCMS and Wordpress. These screen captures reflect the state of the website in its first inception in the winter of 2004. The current KRLX website can be found at krlx.org.

Homepage Link.
Playlists Link.
Production Link.
iTunes Portal Link.


Art After New Media: Interfaces

Posted: September 13th, 2003 | Author: Cameron | Filed under: Design, Flash, New Media, Photography, Web | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

For the Art After New Media course I spent much of our time examining the link between information and interface. My first project examined the map as an interface for the actions of our daily lives. I project my movements throughout the day in a breadcrumb fashion throughout the campus and also lay the communications infrastructure that enables my life to extend beyond physical limitations, hence data and phone networks. Mapped Interface Link.


map.jpg

Secondly we examined how interface, used in linear and nonlinear fashions, can change the meaning of information. This project uses flash to explore a record shop in a very casual way resulting in different outcomes depending on one’s browsing habits. Largely a conceptual piece, it presents the idea that interface can be used to tell a narrative in a dynamic way. Linear Interface as Narrative Link.


record-shop.png