OK, the obscure title can mean any of the following:
- We launched the Interactive 3D Graphics MOOC last Monday, and dinner follows l
aunch. - I’m feverishly working on the second half of the course (today I learned how to use tweening in three.js) and the only time I leave my office is for food and bed.
- This They Might Be Giants song is stuck in my head.
- Come and get it! It’s all downloadable.
After a few months of writing lessons, I’m entirely in the mode of “how can I make a question or exercise out of this lesson?”
As of yesterday I think of the course as “outta beta”. There are some minor glitches we’ll fix in the weeks ahead, but now all the major stuff is in place. The thing that’s entirely great is that everything about the course is downloadable (thank you, Udacity). All the videos, for example, which is a big help to people with slow or censored YouTube connections. Here’s the rundown:
- Videos are available in unit-sized chunks.
- Code is all githubbed here, and there’s a zip download. Unzip and run the index and they’re all there (except solutions).
- All my lesson scripts are here, and there’s other good stuff on the wiki page there. Tallied up, the first half of the course, in five PDFs, comes out to 367 letter-sized pages (admittedly a lot of figures, but that’s A Good Thing). Jeez, I’m writing a book. With code. And videos.
- I put the demos (and exercises, but not solutions) up here. Click and you’re running a demo. This is just the github distribution uploaded to our site. I’ll make a guide to all the demos once the course is done; some of these are pretty handy for explaining things, once you know what you’re looking at.
- All lesson instructor comments are here. Some lessons have additional information and links to resources. Rather than have to search through all the lessons for that link you saw somewhere, they’re all here.
Entirely unrelated, but here’s the cool three.js link for the day.