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Popcorn Learning Lab London

When you schedule a Learning Lab for 11 on a Sunday, and the sun decides to shine on the British Isles, you start to get nervous about whether people show up. This was the predicament at 10:50 am on the day of our first-ever Popcorn Learning Lab, held at Mozilla’s new London office. Imagine our delight, then, to see more than 30 people come through the doors!

#poplab hacking

To get started, we showed a series of popcorn demos. The project is always much easier to understand when you see the different ways people have applied it – watching the evolution of demos from things like the Rebellious Pixels semantic remix to the recent Know Your Exit creation had lightbulbs going off around the room.

We wanted to have participants move into creation as fast as possible – to facilitate this, Brian Chirls created the “Popcorn Boilerplate” project: a bare-bones HTML page featuring popcorn. For content, we had everyone work with Episode 4 of Kirby Ferguson’s fantastic Everything Is A Remix series.

@thecole working with new coders at #doclab

Before lunch, Popcorn community members Brian Chirls and Cole Gillespie led folks with a background in Javascript through the basics of using the library and creating custom plugins. Those with no prior coding experience were brave enough to test drive the alpha version of Popcorn Maker.

After we had recharged with some food, we broke into several groups in order to get down to some serious webmaking. Group 1 wanted to apply their newfound knowledge of the Popcorn.js library to a unique creation. Group 2 decided to use Popcorn Maker to try and augment one of their own videos. And Group 3 wanted to ideate a web native project in more detail with wireframes and a project spec.

#poplab wireframe

The first order of business was paper prototyping – each of the 3 groups began mapping out the experience they wanted to create. Brian and Cole each acted as the “help desk”, answering questions that hackers would bring. Folks using Popcorn Maker pushed through the bugs to upload their own videos, apply events, and export their code. Before long, far more time had flown by then we realized. Those who were determined to get a demo done began a furious hack to the finish line.

At our closing circle, we showcased the results of the day. Stephen Johnson, who’d come to explore the potential of using Popcorn at British Telecom, made a custom Popcorn.js plugin to sample frames from a movie to populate a collage. Try it out here

#poplab demo

Lawrence Job, a frequent hacker at Young Rewired State, paired up with Chris Hutchinson, a Birmingham student whose website won the Guardian’s “Website Of The Yea” at the Guardian Student Media Awards. Together they hacked up a commenting system that uses websockets to allow multiple people to create comments using popcorn. Try it out!

Kat, who produces video content for the Salvation Army, realized how useful Popcorn Maker can be to non-profits. She augmented one of their videos using the Pop Up Video template, to add the name, picture and twitter page of a local MP who had attended one of their events (scroll to around 0:31 seconds in the video). She also added a link to the Salvation Army’s donations page (1:32), a simple but powerful use of “hypervideo”. Techniques. Watch her video!

What We Learned

Working with a shared video was definitely something we’ll continue to do in future learning labs – it lets participants focus on creating popcorn experiences rather than video production. We’d like to take the concept further and provide a series of simple exercises that everyone in the group can explore right away. The popcorn boilerplate was a great start, but we need a series of simple recipes everyone can follow, regardless of coding skill. Further on that point, we chose to separate participants into those who knew JavaScript and those who don’t , which in hindsight goes against our cross-disciplinary working model. Many participants let us know in the closing circle that they would have enjoyed the chance to “cross the aisle” and work with people of different skill sets and experiences. It’s on us to design a flow for the day that allows coders and media makers to be working together for the entire time.

#poplab team vision

We also learned that the future for these types of events is quite bright – that there are lots of people eager to not only learn technologies like popcorn, but who want to challenge themselves to roll up their sleeves and start hacking. A big thanks to those who gave up their Sunday afternoons to hack with us and kickstart the Popcorn Learning labs!

Popcorn.js 1.2

Hot on the heels of Popcorn Maker v0.2, the Popcorn team is proud to announce the release of Popcorn.js v1.2! It’s been 3 months in the making and we’ve got some hot new features for you to play with:

Beta Internet Explorer 8 support

Thanks to the efforts of Scott Downe and Greg Kindel at RAMP, we have Popcorn.js working with Youtube in IE8 in addition to our supported browsers. Some plugins work, such as subtitle and footnote, and we will be adding support for more in the future. If you’re interested in adding support for your own Flash players to Popcorn.js, please read the documentation.

update: It appears that as of 1.2, we are now passing all Internet Explorer 10 tests, as well!

Allow content to remain after ended

The behaviour of plugins has been enhanced to give authors more control over the life-cycle of displayed content. Authors may now set the value of “end” to either false or undefined, which will cause the content to remain forever. Previously, unspecified “end” properties would default to the duration of the video. This change will allow plugins to stay active after the media has ended.

Popcorn.smart player

This new add-on will load Popcorn with the correct player based on the URL. Popcorn authors will now be able to add a youtube, vimeo, or native html5 media file and have Popcorn call the right player. See the documentation.

Deprecated methods

We have deprecated the following methods:

  • listen (now “on”)
  • unlisten (now “off”)
  • trigger (now “emit”)
  • exec (now “cue”)
  • The functionality of each old and new method is exactly the same, just with a shorter alias.

Grab bag

  • Added Rdio plugin
  • Added Popcorn.removePlayer
  • Added loadedmetadata, loadeddata, canplaythrough, and ended events to Youtube.
  • Fixed Youtube autoplaying on load
  • Moved development to http://github.com/mozilla/popcorn-js
  • Moved Popcorn.parser, Popcorn.player, and Popcorn.locale out in their own modules
  • Updated test suite to QUnit 1.3

Head over to our downloads page or fork us on Github to get started with Popcorn 1.2!

Mozilla Popcorn @ SXSW

Hello SXSW attendees! Thanks for stopping by.

What is Popcorn?

Popcorn is a Mozilla project to make video work more “like the web.” We make open source software for both developers and storytellers to seize on the possibilities of HTML5 video.

Popcorn is a framework to synchronize web media with any content or service on the web. Developers should check out Popcorn.js, a JavaScript library for web developers and Popcorn Maker, alpha-software that lets anyone create interactive HTML5 video without writing a line of code.

Come meet us at SXSW!

Saturday March 10th
Mozilla, the MIT Media Lab and the Knight Foundation will take part in an “Innovation Fair and Reception” showcasing open technologies for journalists.

Sunday March 11th
Mozilla Director Brett Gaylor will be with friends on a panel at the Film Conference pondering this heavy duty question: Does HTML5 Offer a Montage Moment for Cinema?.

That evening, the Popcorn team returns to the Mozilla Mothership at the SXSW mega event #FEED. Art hackers Beak Labs will be creating a Popcorn installation live on site.

Monday March 12th
See which side of the smackdown Mozilla’s Ben Moskowitz lines up on in the Interactive panel HTML5 for Film: Bleeding Edge or Leading Edge.

Stop by the SXSW tradeshow to see what Popcorn contributors RAMP have been up to. Head to booth 341 where RAMP is showcasing a number of new Popcorn applications and integrations with their core MediaCloud technology for creating and managing timecoded metadata. Tuesday night, as part of the SXSW Block Party, RAMP will have
beers and snacks in the booth as well as free Popcorn t-shirts.


The Living Docs Project

Mozilla is partnering with the world’s leaders in documentary film to present The Living Docs Project, a series of events, projects and code to support the creation of web docs. Living Docs films apply the hacker spirit of open innovation to the world of documentary by using open web technology, sharing code and resources, and releasing early and often.

Living Docs is a partnership between Mozilla, ITVS, The Tribeca Film Institute, BAVC and the Center for Social Media at American University.

At SXSW, we’re announcing our next hackathon, where we’ll pair web developers and documentary filmmakers at the Hot Docs Film Festival. If you’re a filmmaker with an interactive project,sign up here for this unique opportunity!

And check out this video from the last Living Docs hackathon:

Find out more at www.livingdocs.org.

Hold an event in your home town

Interested in hacking with Popcorn in your hood? Popcorn Learning Labs are a great way to build a community of like minded hackers. Read about these events here, then get in touch.

Help us develop Popcorn Maker

Popcorn Maker is an exciting open source project that needs help from contributors like you. Read about our Roadmap here and find out how to help.

Get in touch

We’d love to hear from you! Let us know if you’ve used Popcorn, want to know more, or would like to collaborate.
popcorn@mozilla.com

Roadmap Popcorn Maker 1.0

Roadmap for Popcorn 1.0

We are hard at work on Popcorn Maker.

Currently at version 0.1, Popcorn Maker is a little crufty. But Popcorn Maker 1.0 will hit hard in November of this year.

Popcorn Maker 1.0 will empower you to make cool web-based media, whether you’re a beginner or pro. With over 20 plugins—ranging from Twitter to Google Maps to video processing—you’ll be able to stitch up a stylish video that’s “woven” into the web. And, of course, it’s 100% free and open source.

Users will be able to publish and share their creations on their blog, Twitter, or Tumblr (or just grab the code). And the app will reward them for learning more advanced HTML, CSS, and Javascript skills.

When it hits critical mass, Popcorn Maker will be an engine for community innovation in open video.

I blogged about the Popcorn Maker vision in July of last year. Since then, it’s moved to the center of the Foundation’s “Maker” strategy for 2012.

Roadmapping

Last week—thanks to four intense, caffeine-fueled days—the project team arrived at a pretty solid roadmap and vision for Popcorn Maker. Our issue tracker also includes several hundred new/reassigned bugs, mapped against cheeky code names for each release. (We’ve chosen a blockbuster movie motif, so look forward to 0.2 Ghostbusters, 0.3 Breakfast Club, 0.4 Top Gun, 0.5 Pulp Fiction, 0.6 Terminator, 0.7 Amelie, 0.8 Rushmore, 0.9 Wrath of Khan, and finally, 1.0—Matrix.)

What’s new? A heightened level of ambition, matched with increased rigor to get it done.

Starting in 0.7, you'll be able to embed a viral Popcorn player on third-party sites.

Importantly, we’ve developed a working theory of how Popcorn can become a webmaking virus, which Brett Gaylor has blogged about here.

All of this is reflected in a shiny vision document, which is a work in progress (we’ll share next week). We’ve hashed out some user stories, gotten granular on the technical challenges, and imagined how the UI/UX might work. We need to kick the tires a bit before we’re confident in both the user stories and the roadmap, but we’re close.

We’d love to have your feedback in our Lighthouse issue tracker. (And, as always, we’d love to hear your template ideas! Feel free to create a ticket and let us know what’s on your mind.)

Here’s a look at some of our thinking.

Editor UI

Most users will experience the app as a special editor tray that sits on top of the project you’re working on (Popcorn Maker is a WYSIWYG tool). We need to get the editor UI/UX right. It needs to be compact but not constraining.

We’re moving event editors to the tray (in lieu of floating windows) and making it more intuitive to add Popcorn events to a page (just drag and drop onto the page target).

To make the app more versatile, we’ll offer a simple CSS editor UI to change your styles, without isolating you too much from the actual CSS:

Popcorn Gallery

The life-force of Popcorn Maker will be the Popcorn Gallery, which will let contributors share templates that others can build on. Call it the “WordPress.org effect.”

Plugins

You can use any popcorn.js plugin in Popcorn Maker. Even write your own.

Last but not least—plugins. Popcorn.js plugins are what make Popcorn Maker magic. We’re currently planning on supporting the following plugins, each with a pleasing editor UI (these are subject to change): Image, Video, Webpage, Wikipedia, Attribution, Media control, Apply class, Google map, Open Street Map, Chroma, Video effects, 3D object, Processing, WordRiver, PDF, DocumentCloud, Twitter, Facebook graph, Flickr.

One of the coolest things about Popcorn Maker, though, is that it will support every Popcorn.js plugin through a default editor. And plugin authors can create editor UIs for their plugins. In other words, the project is intentionally modular, so the Popcorn.js community can help us build out the functionality of the app.

As the community grows, the app becomes more powerful.

Seriously. Check out Seriously.js, then read that again.

Roadmap—want to help?

It’s going to be a hard sprint. But it’s super plausible, especially with Bobby Richter, Dave Humphrey, and the brilliant students of Seneca’s CDOT at the wheel. Here’s our roadmap, which will likely change a bit before we freeze it this month. Want to help? Join #popcorn in irc.mozilla.org, or join our mailing list.

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