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Other / 01.02.2011

I have received the information required to apply for a Regional Art Development Fund grant. The grant is for creating data files and DVDs of the 100 plus hours of the video archive for the State Library of Queensland. Steve got the library’s understanding that we include a high resolution version for future  editing purposes.

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Other / 13.01.2011

Today I received the great news that EOL is now able to harvest videos from vimeo. Compared with generating new website gallery pages and converting the data they contain to XML, making the videos harvestable only involves providing the binomial (scientific name) and family to which a species belongs, adding some specific tags and including the relevant licensing agreement.

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Other / 12.01.2011

I received an email from Lynne Sealie, the communications manager of ALA, which is an international partner of EOL, praising our website and flagging various linkages, including displaying my images on their site.

 

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Other / 01.01.2011

I felt somewhat daunted by the thought that I have such a backlog of images to get onto EOL.

I received an email from a friend, which caused me to Google the scientific name of the Leaf-Tailed Gecko. Inter alia I clicked on a Wikipedia entry provided by the State Library of Queensland and at the bottom of the page they included a ‘See the Leaf-tailed Gecko on the Encyclopedia of Life’ link, which I followed and was taken straight to my page! That was a real boost.

I phoned Simon to tell him about this and he replied with some terrific news of his own. He had proposed to Nicole early on New Year’s Day and been accepted. Talk about a great start to 2011.

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Other / 14.07.2010

Having read Chris Palmer’s timely and groundbreaking book ‘Shooting in the Wild’, about the trials and tribulations of wild-life filmmaking, with his welcome emphasis on the appropriate ethical requirements of the genre, I emailed him my appreciation of what he had done. I recommend his book to all who feel that deception, misrepresentation, and exploitation of animals has no place in natural history documentaries.

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Other / 02.07.2010

Received the last of eight daily emails from Peter Hendry, an expert with whom Doug White put me in contact, following a presentation of my DVD Looking Out For The Overlooked at the June Landcare meeting. In one of his emails he referred to difficulty with images. I thought he was referring to mine, but it turned out he was referring to some of the reference images used to identify my moths. I wonder if the Queensland Museum knows of him. I had some moths identified via the museum. This took quite a while. I sent Peter my email, with six moths for him to identify, in the morning and received a reply that afternoon.

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Other / 22.06.2010

This evening I helped Steve capture 166 frames I have selected from recent tapes for our image bank.

 

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Other / 09.06.2010

I received an email from the Greenscreen Festival stating that my entry had not been selected for screening. This came as no surprise given that entries are made by broadcasters and the like.

 

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Other / 19.05.2010

This morning I screened ‘One Small Place On Earth . . .’ at the May meeting of the Probus Club attended by about 50 members. It may be its one and only screening. The documentary seemed to be well received and there were plenty of questions afterwards.

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Other / 28.04.2010

Today I posted the data disc to Sakkeer Hussein, comprising a number of my YouTube clips he had requested for his classroom project. Steve and I had to complete the Greenscreen DVD and eight new Youtube clips before we could turn our attention to compiling the data disc.

Sakkeer, a zoology teacher from Kerala in India, first got in touch in December last year on YouTube with a request to use some of my video clips for his teaching aid project for biology students. He has uploaded hundreds of clips of his own and other footage, covering a vast range of life forms including microbes. Here is his channel.