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Showing posts from October, 2018

Flipbook Project

My flipbook is based on the novel 1984 by George Orwell. This novel is a dystopian future novel (one of the original dystopian future novels) centered around a middle aged man named Winston who falls in love with a younger woman who is a member of the Party. They carry out a secret relationship, trying to hide it from Big Brother, until they get caught by members of the Party. Much of the imagery in the story is what I chose to illustrate in this flipbook. The glass paperweight which represents a secret paradise to Winston, images of Big Brother watching over the people walking through the street in their blue jumpsuits, the picture of the Church hanging in the secret room in the shop that conceals the telescreen that watches Winston and Julia, and of course the slogan of the Party: War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength. While drawing the images for this flipbook, it was really difficult to gauge the speed of frames and how that would look in video. As a result o

Vacuum Tube Assignment

The vacuum tube was invented by Sir John Ambrose Fleming and was patented in 1905. The vacuum tube worked by placing an extra electrode inside of an incandescent light bulb. When the filament of the bulb was heated white-hot, electrons were boiled off into the vacuum inside the bulb. If the extra electrode is made more positive than the hot filament, a direct current flows through the vacuum. The current flows from the filament to the electrode, converting AC signals to DC. The vacuum tube (or vacuum diode) is considered the beginning of electronics and was used in radio receivers and radar for over 50 years. The invention of the vacuum tube allowed for innovations such as television, long distance phone calls, and the first electronic digital computers. Today, vacuum tubes have been replaced with transistors, but for over half a century, the vacuum tubes were a crucial aspect of the most advanced technology.