Narrative/Story Telling,
Aesthetics of Interface,
Augmented Reality,
Writing for Web 2.0,
Web 2.0 story telling:
“Web 2.0 narratives should be social. It's an obvious point, given the social software element within the Web 2.0 idea, but worth returning to. Fan fiction, reader communities, participatory narratives, reader contributions, modding, mixing should be hallmarks.”
Bryan Alexander@Infocult
“Web 2.0 storytelling on the other hand seems more like utilizing the interactive options of the Web for more collaborative writing projects. I've engaged, for example, in role-playing by email for years, and recently thought that using a blog or wiki or other CMS would be a great improvement, from a logistics standpoint, on that tech. I'm working with some buddies right now on putting together a site to host text-based, collaborative role-playing stories; multiple authors, multiple games, multiple worlds, etc.”
Andy Havens@TinkerX
Blog Novels:
The Dionaea House
The Coffin
Podcast Novels:
Podiobooks
Visual Story Telling (Flickr):
Tell a story in 5 frames (Visual story telling)
Story Time
Social Software:
del.icio.us
Myspace
Video (watch share create):
Castpost
Clipshack
Grouper
Revver
Vimeo
Vsocial
YouTube
BlipTV
Modding:
The Movies
Mixing:
Nordstrom Silver Screen
To Be Listen To
Machinima:
Machinima.com
Machinima Acadamy of Arts and Sciences
Fan Fiction:
Cosplay
ARGs:
Alternate Reality Gaming Network
General Web 2.0 Links:
Jim's del.icio.us Links
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