Archive for April, 2009

Using WordPress for your portfolio

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

I’m always thrilled when I hear about new ways to use existing tools, even if “new” really just means new to me. So it was great to see Smashing Magazine’s latest article about the capability of WordPress for portfolios. We use WordPress for beyondwords, and I also use it for my personal blog. But the “Ultimate Guide To Using WordPress For A Portfolio” shows how you can take advantage of the tool for more than blogging.

WordPressLet’s face it: designing your online portfolio can be a scary process, especially if you don’t have strong web design skills. Smashing Magazine helps the process along by sharing WordPress themes for those who don’t want to fully customize their site and giving tips on how to set up your main page and project pages.

They also showcase designers who are already using WordPress for their portfolios. I’ve been brainstorming for the last few months about how I want to update my portfolio, and this is just the kind of inspiration I needed to dig in.

Check out the full article for more resources and eye candy, and our previous portfolio tips and resources. If you’re a professional writer using WordPress for your portfolio, let us know about your experience!

Professional writing professor to testify about copyright

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

On May 6-7, 2009, Martine Courant Rife, a professional writing professor at both Lansing Community College and Michigan State University, will be traveling to Washington, DC to testify at the Library of Congress US Copyright Office before the Librarian of Congress and the US Registrar of Copyrights about exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA; Section 1201[a][1] title 17, United States Code).

Every three years the US Copyright office has rulemaking proceedings in order to gather evidence about creating exemptions to the DMCA. The DMCA makes it illegal to hack into a DVD even if the purpose of that hacking is to gather clips to be used as “fair use” such as in remix writing. Specifically, the law states: “No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.”

These rulemaking proceedings have taken place three previous times. In 2006, some film professors requested an exemption and were granted that. The exemption reads as follows:

“Audiovisual works included in the educational library of a college or university’s film or media studies department, when circumvention is accomplished for the purpose of making compilations of portions of those works for educational use in the classroom by media studies or film professors.”

The rulemaking process includes submitting comments and responses to comments as well as requests to testify. In general, the educational community is asking for the film studies professor exemption to be expanded. In contrast, groups/companies like Time Warner and the Motion Picture Association of America do not favor such expansion. The hearings will decide this issue, and also decide whether the original film studies exemption will continue into the future.

Martine is arguing both in favor of expanding the exemption to include professional writing students and their teachers, as well as any/all non-commercial use. She’s also arguing in favor of including all DVDs, even those not owned by an institution’s library. Her request to testify can be read here (PDF).

For more information about the DMCA and the rulemaking procedures, click here. The schedule for the hearings is also available for viewing.

Martine’s research is at the intersection of intellectual property and professional writing. She has been teaching at Lansing Community College for nine years, and she recently received her PhD in Rhetoric & Writing from Michigan State University. She serves as an Affiliate Researcher for the WIDE Research Center at MSU, and is also a licensed attorney. She can be reached at martinerife@gmail.com.

Summer job opportunity: Tweet for Pizza Hut

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Some interesting tweets have appeared in my feed this morning about Pizza Hut hiring a summer intern to tweet about their brand and products.twintern

According to an article in the New York Times applications will be accepted starting today, Monday, April 20th at www.pizzahut.com. The selected applicant will be required to move to Dallas, Texas and work at the corporate headquarters.

Minimum requirements for the position are as follows:

Candidates should be a junior or senior studying for a B.A. or B.S., preferably with specialization in marketing, journalism, communications, public relations or a related course study. Demonstrated knowledge of social media is a must. Selected applicants will be required to submit a portfolio of social media know-how.

The deadline for application is May 3, 2009.

Results for Survey for People Who Make Websites

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Last July, A List Apart (ALA) held its second “Survey for People Who Make Websites“, which gives professional writers, editors, designers, students, and hobbyists who have a role in web design a chance to share their experience with the field.

More than 30,000 people participated in the 2008 survey, which covered salary, education, job satisfaction, and much more.

This year’s findings paint a clearer picture of the distinctions between full-time and freelance web professionals: how you work, what you earn, and what you love about the job. Interestingly, too, despite the brutality of a global recession that was already in full swing (like an axe) when we offered the survey, most respondents revealed a surprisingly high level of job security, satisfaction, and confidence in the future.

Here are just a few of the interesting results:

  • More than half of those surveyed are employees, and 26.2% are freelancers
  • More than 70% have a personal site/blog
  • Number one way to stay current: read relevant websites/zines/blogs

Check out the full results on the survey’s website. You can also download the raw data here.

In the Workplace with Lisa Eldred

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Name: Lisa Eldred
Title: Editorial Assistant; Freelance Editor
Website: http://wasabijane.com
Location: Lansing, MI

Lisa Eldred

Tell us about your educational/professional background.
I have a B.A. in English from Grand Valley State University and recently completed an M.A. in Digital Rhetoric and Professional Writing at Michigan State University, with a certificate in Serious Game Design.

Work-wise, I have been at MSU Outreach and Engagement since October 2004, though only recently as a full-time employee. I also do freelance editing for Joe Darden, Professor of Geography at MSU, and helped develop the Beginning Farmers website for Taylor Reid in Community, Agriculture, Recreation, and Resource Studies.

Tell us about your current job.
Outreach and Engagement’s mission is to promote and support outreach work and scholarship across the entire university. My unit works mostly on content development and distribution–so reports, websites, brochures, conference support, ad infinitum. I help maintain three websites, write stories for our annual magazine, and, most frequently, design and edit scholarly reports. Thus far, my freelance work has been of a similar nature.

(more…)

Happy Birthday, beyondwords!

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Today is the one year anniversary of the beyondwords blog launch!

Thank you to all of our contributors and readers over the last year! We can’t wait to see what the next year brings!

Never Sleep: Transitioning to design professional

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Never SleepEMPRNT recently sat down with Andre Andreev and Dan Covert of dress code NY about their new book, Never Sleep.

When asked what triggered the idea for the book, Covert had this to say:

I was really influenced in school by “tellmewhy.” It kind of changed how I looked at design and we thought maybe we could do that for students…. And once we started teaching we realized how literally we had just gone through all the stuff they were asking about, so why not write about it?

The book features both early and professional work by the authors as they talk about what worked and what didn’t, giving design students insight into what the transition to design professional is all about. From the book’s website:

There is a major disconnect between the life of a design student and the transition to being a design professional. To demystify the transition, we share the failures, successes, and surprises during our years in college and progression into the field: the creative process, monetary problems, internships, interviews, mistakes, and personal relationships. We include the work from our first design class to our most current client work, along with side stories and interviews from our mentors, teachers, and peers. This book will serve as the ultimate companion for design students, educators, and anyone breaking into a creative field.

Be sure to check out the full EMPRNT interview and add the book to your Amazon cart or wish list.

Design Inspiration: Toronto

Monday, April 6th, 2009

I was in Toronto, Canada last week for a social marketing conference at the University of Toronto. We had lovely weather and I enjoyed snapping photos of fun signage and cityscapes. Here are a few of my favorites:

canadagallery

1). I love the big red typography for the Art Gallery of Ontario; 2). In-store display at Eaton Center featuring the names of notable Canadians; 3). The Yonge Shopping District near Eaton Center; 4). A cool name and typography for a steak restaurant; 5). Oddly enough (or maybe not), a fair number of pubs featured forest animals on their signs. All followed by “Firkin.” This was my favorite; 6). A street sign in Chinatown near the University.

A Technological Sixth Sense

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

I’m very excited about this work going on at an MIT Media Lab. As technology becomes more and more mobile, I think this is something that would be wildly popular, providing it’s affordable.

The photo feature is my favorite!! What are your thoughts?

Design inspiration: Guam

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

As a popular destination for Japanese tourists, I wasn’t sure what to expect during a recent trip to Guam other than sunshine and duty-free shopping. But I found myself pleasantly surprised by the island’s natural beauty, as well as its various cultural influences. Here is a bit of what inspired me during my stay.

Guam Inspiration

(left to right, top to bottom) 1. Pandanus fruit, 2. Mixed upper- and lowercase street sign, 3. Fort Nuestra de la Soledad, 4. View of a rainy day of Guam from a sunny day on Cocos Island, 5. Bright blue sign + bicycle, 6. Fallout shelter near Latte Stone Park, 7. Rusted records of couples married at Two Lovers Point, 8. Replica of the Statue of Liberty, 9. Fuchsia flowers, 10. Sunset over the Philippine Sea.