Doug Loudenback
04-20-2009, 07:51 PM
Or, at least, so I say! :kicking:
It's the 1st blog post I've made for several weeks since I have been wholly focusing on the web-html-based Vintage Clickable Map project. Here's the link:
Doug Dawgz Blog: The Ultimate Deep Deuce Collection (http://dougdawg.blogspot.com/2009/04/ultimate-deep-deuce-collection.html)
Actually, it is an outgrowth of the clickable map project except that I've used a flash file as the vehicle. As flash files go, it's pretty small (1.73 MB) so it should load rather quickly. I've defined "Deep Deuce" rather generously to include areas which are not, strictly speaking, part of that historical area but were relevant to the black community who lived there ... the Douglass schools in the warehouse district, the Walnut Bridge used to get there, Riverside Park which came to be a "Colored Park" after Oklahoma City passed it's "Jim Crow" ordinances requiring racial segregation in residences as public accommodations (which story I'll write about in a different article shortly).
The opening "page" looks like this:
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49/DougLoudenback/maps/ultimatedeepdeuce.jpg
As you move your mouse over items in the map, the window at the top of the map immediately changes, such as that show below:
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49/DougLoudenback/maps/ultimatedeepdeuce2.jpg
When that happens, a "hand" icon appears at the map location. You can click that icon to open up a web-based page which is actually a page in the Vintage Clickable Map, and in which there is much more information and more and larger images about the building or other object (those objects being the Walnut/Finley Bridge, Deep Deuce aerials, and NE 2nd street and map views).
M, if you're reading this, I'd particularly like your feedback since you are a flash guru.
But, actually, I'd appreciate feedback from anyone who will give it. A technical concern is that the file is too "tall." At 768 px high, even if you press F11 for a full screen display, part of the area is cropped if your video resolution is 1024 x 768, which means that some scrolling is necessary even if not much. I'd like to know if that's a problem ... if it is, I'll resize the frame but at some cost to the top window's content.
I hope you like it, but I seriously would appreciate your feedback.
It's the 1st blog post I've made for several weeks since I have been wholly focusing on the web-html-based Vintage Clickable Map project. Here's the link:
Doug Dawgz Blog: The Ultimate Deep Deuce Collection (http://dougdawg.blogspot.com/2009/04/ultimate-deep-deuce-collection.html)
Actually, it is an outgrowth of the clickable map project except that I've used a flash file as the vehicle. As flash files go, it's pretty small (1.73 MB) so it should load rather quickly. I've defined "Deep Deuce" rather generously to include areas which are not, strictly speaking, part of that historical area but were relevant to the black community who lived there ... the Douglass schools in the warehouse district, the Walnut Bridge used to get there, Riverside Park which came to be a "Colored Park" after Oklahoma City passed it's "Jim Crow" ordinances requiring racial segregation in residences as public accommodations (which story I'll write about in a different article shortly).
The opening "page" looks like this:
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49/DougLoudenback/maps/ultimatedeepdeuce.jpg
As you move your mouse over items in the map, the window at the top of the map immediately changes, such as that show below:
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49/DougLoudenback/maps/ultimatedeepdeuce2.jpg
When that happens, a "hand" icon appears at the map location. You can click that icon to open up a web-based page which is actually a page in the Vintage Clickable Map, and in which there is much more information and more and larger images about the building or other object (those objects being the Walnut/Finley Bridge, Deep Deuce aerials, and NE 2nd street and map views).
M, if you're reading this, I'd particularly like your feedback since you are a flash guru.
But, actually, I'd appreciate feedback from anyone who will give it. A technical concern is that the file is too "tall." At 768 px high, even if you press F11 for a full screen display, part of the area is cropped if your video resolution is 1024 x 768, which means that some scrolling is necessary even if not much. I'd like to know if that's a problem ... if it is, I'll resize the frame but at some cost to the top window's content.
I hope you like it, but I seriously would appreciate your feedback.