Adobe Animate -Interaction (Session 2)

We started the work with an introduction to the session and discussed the final task for the London museum. We looked at some of last year's work and got a better idea of what to do.

In animate we made a new document named bug. With properties 

Width: 960   

Frame Rate: 30

Height: 640  

Platform Type: HTML5 Canvas

Then we made 4 layers and gave them names like Action, Label, Button, Animation. We made a new button clip in the library and designed our button with 2 components to give it a 3D look. Then we animated the button a little bit gave it a hover color and pushed down the effect in pressing it. In another video clip, we made a new bug and gave it animation. We brought the button and Animation into their respective layers. 


We had to label the animation layer 10 frames late because that is the sequence that would play when the button is pressed, thereafter the coding process was easy because we can add the script in any layer and animate provides us with presets of animation. First, we added the motion tween to the animated bug and then added a script to it. It was a short script explaining animate to initiate sequence Animate when the button is pressed.


Homework.

The Electric Light

Thomas Edison showing the incandescent lamps he created in his lab, circa 1920.

Thomas Edison showing the incandescent lamps he created in his lab, circa 1920.

While they are easy to take for granted, all it takes is a short power outage to remind us of the importance of artificial lights. Pioneered in the early 19th century by Humphry Davy and his carbon arc lamp, electric lights developed throughout the 1800s thanks to the efforts of inventors like Warren de la Rue, Joseph Wilson Swan, and Thomas Alva Edison. It was Edison and Swan who patented the first long-lasting light bulbs in 1879 and 1880, liberating society from a near-total reliance on daylight. Electric lights went on to be used in everything from home lighting and street lamps to flashlights and car headlights. The complex networks of wires erected to power early light bulbs also helped lead to the first domestic electrical wiring, paving the way for countless other in-home appliances.


The Steam Engine

James Watt's Patent Rotative Steam Engine.

James Watt's Patent Rotative Steam Engine.

Cars, airplanes, factories, trains, spacecraft—none of these transportation methods would have been possible if not for the early breakthrough of the steam engine. The first practical use of external combustion dates back to 1698 when Thomas Savery developed a steam-powered water pump. Steam engines were then perfected in the late 1700s by James Watt, and went on to fuel one of the most momentous technological leaps in human history during the Industrial Revolution. Throughout the 1800s external combustion allowed for exponential improvement in transportation, agriculture, and manufacturing, and also powered the rise of world superpowers like Great Britain and the United States. Most important of all, the steam engine’s basic principle of energy-into-motion set the stage for later innovations like internal combustion engines and jet turbines, which prompted the rise of cars and aircraft during the 20th century.

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