Pages

Friday, October 14, 2011

Four More Classes


After intensives week we have only four more class periods. I will get the remaining piers outlined so you can fill them with wood planks. Then we need to get building!

I want us to show some of our creations to the rest of the community at the end.

Viaduct Party

The Department of Transportation is having a contest for exclusive access to the viaduct before a 9 day demolition. Read about the contest rules here.

Digging Light Rail Tunnel

Here's a story from the Seattle Times about digging the light rail tunnel.

It's not on the waterfront, but it is about digging in Seattle!

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Alaskan Way Connected!

The north and south sections of Alaskan Way are connected in Minecraft. Now we need to label and clean up the perimeters of the piers.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Take Minecraft with you!

Hello! I am glad you all are enjoying Minecraft. I wanted to share with you Mojang's latest release: Minecraft Pocket Edition for Android. It costs about seven dollars for the full edition, which allows users to access multi-player worlds such as the one you all are using. This could be very handy for your trips to the waterfront -- you could add information to the game world in real time!

I will be using it to help me improve TopoMC. I am confident that you will find new and interesting ways to use these tools!

Monday, October 3, 2011

Useful Mod and Texture Pack


Tired of mining to build? Download toomanyitems mod. Follow this link for instructions and download.

Want to change the way your character looks? Download the painterly texture pack here.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Friday Tour #2

The second waterfront tour included some interesting sights.

First we looked through binoculars on the roof of Pier 66.

We saw a boat at the Pier 66 marina that holds 6,000 gallons of fuel in its main tank. It costs $24,000 just to fill the tank!

Quinn's sharp eyes quickly spotted crabs, starfish, and salmon in the water.

We saw this cool bike stand/sculpture at the aquarium.

We will come back on another Friday to see Duncan Moore dive in the big fish tank.

Lauren spotted this plaque in the sidewalk at Pier 62/63.

We talked to Rick Williams while he carved a totem for his brother John. We smelled the cedar of a smaller version he was carving and sniffed the sage in his smudge pot.

We ate lunch at Ivar's and read a story about Ivar Haglund by Seattle painter William Cumming. Cumming told about Ivar's bedroom being filled with bees.

We stopped at a Stonington gallery to view Tlingit artists's work, especially a green glass octopus.

Martin picked our last stop at the Klondike Museum where we saw a replica of 1 ton of gold bars worth over $14 million at today's prices.

Seattle History Resource


I found this great online resource for Seattle waterfront history. The site is maintained by Paul Dorpat, Jean Sherrard, and Bérangère Lomont. Not only are there posts about and pictures of the waterfront, but other Seattle and Washington history topics as well.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Surveying the Landscape

I picked up a Seattle waterfront map today at Metsker's Map in the Pike Market.

Scobie gave me the idea of putting a transparent grid over the map. Each box of the grid works out to about 13 minecraft blocks on each side.

We will find a point in our Minecraft world that corresponds to a point on the real map. Then we can create a 13 block grid in the game to locate the edges of the piers and building areas.

Simple, right?

Class Organization Stuff

Everyone is encouraged to post and comment on the blog.

New minecrafters (Asher, Isabella, Joshua, Margaret, Margaux, Peyton), use courage to ask for help from others.

Experienced minecrafters (Aaron, Ben, Martin, Quinn, River, Zane) engage the community by teaching others what you know.

We will clean up the landscape as we go.

Quinn, Joshua, and Ben will be the survey team.

Margaux, Margaret, and Joshua are interested in making a real cube, chicken, and pig.

Martin will need to make us all operators, allow flying, turn off PVP (no attacks), and verify that the game is in "peaceful" mode.

Peyton will lead the thank you activities for Jack Twilley.

We will watch waterfront DVDs during class while we are gaming.

Field Trips

Here are the field trip ideas and the votes:

8 – Aquarium
7 – Underground Tour
7 – Tillicum Village
6 – Ferry
6 – Arcade
4 – Waterfront
4 – Klondike Museum
4 – Container Port
3 – Pier 66
3 – Department of Transportation

History Topics

Here are the history topics we can investigate and the number of votes:

8 – Great Fire of 1889
6 – Century 21 (World Fair of 1962)
5 – Gold Rush of 1896
4 – Logging/coal
4 – Alaska/Yukon/Pacific Exhibition of 1909
2 – Railroads
2 – Chief Seattle

Where Do We Build?

A survey team (Quinn, Joshua, and Ben) will find a scale map of the real waterfront to measure and mark distances between our in game structures (piers, roads, buildings etc.).

Our avatars spawn on an island at the location of the Coleman Dock ferry terminal. Do not cut down the tree there.

You can swim to the shoreline, walk far away from the waterfront and build freely. The waterfront will be off limits to building until the survey team gets done.

Gamer Tags

Here are the class gamer tags:

Aaron – 1z2x3ced5qa
Asher – asherboy5
Ben – megafish9000
Isabella – 7isabella7
Joshua – jozhua55369
Margaret – margaret666
Martin – crazyawesome
Peyton – peytsiepie
Quinn – MR_boombastaco
River – riogrande13
Steve – hipcity
Zane – friskyfawn

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Server Online!


Thanks to Adam Feuer for acquiring and configuring the server, and Jack Twilley for writing and running the map translation software in the Amazon Cloud. We owe these guys a big hug!

As with every new project, several unexpected problems cropped up and these guys found solutions. In the words of Rico from the movie Hot Rod, "That...is...how...it...is...DONE!"

Adam delivered the machine to my basement last night.

Zombies, Domo, and DeadMau5 want to play. Sorry guys, this will be in "peaceful" mode - no monsters. Game on!

Monday, September 26, 2011

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Server Update

Adam will install the server at my house tonight! We have a 2:1 map of Seattle so each Minecraft block equals 2 square meters in real life.

More to come...

Friday, September 23, 2011

Photos from Friday Tour

Here are some shots from our trip today.

We saw City Hall Park from the bus. Cannonballs from the battleship Decatur shooting at natives in the mid 1800's have been uncovered as recently as 1995.

We learned that Kinnear Park was sold to Seattle for $1.00.

We listened to Chief Seattle's address to the Department of the Interior and realized we were walking on the ashes of many ancestors.

We visited a machine shop on Elliot Avenue. A sign says, "If you have a complaint, ask Mr. White." I asked, "Who is Mr. White?" They said, "We're all Mr. White." It has been in the same family for three generations. They showed us old photos of Elliot Avenue. First it was water, then it was a wooden logging road. We visited a chicken coop behind the shop!

We saw herons, a seagull swallowing a starfish, smelled a rose that reminded us of Scotch Tape, spotted a gribble in driftwood, listened to waves, learned about the importance of intertidal environments in the reconstruction of the seawall, saw a totem pole with a bear and mosquito, and saw sculpture titled "Adjacent, Against, Upon," and had lunch at Anthony's Fish and Chips. It was Joshua's first ever fish and chips.

We learned that Myrtle Edwards was a musician and open minded advocate for public parks.

Cary Moon and Katey Bean helped us understand what important issues we need to confront in our waterfront design.

We spotted fish, starfish, and crabs in the water.

We saw a mime on Alaskan Way. He mirrored Joshua and Quinn.

And we took the bus back to school.

Stay tuned for part 2 next Friday!

Old Seattle Maps

When the Denny Party arrived here in 1851, about 500 Duwamish Indians lived around Elliott Bay, and hundreds more in villages from Shilshole Bay to present-day Renton. Elliott Bay appears here as drawn by a U.S. Navy coastal survey in 1854. At that time, these shores were blanketed with a coastal forest of Douglas firs, cedars and hemlock, interspersed with open spaces maintained by the natives. (from the Seattle Times).

More maps can be seen here.

Back in the Day

Check out this map of the Native settlements before Seattle was a city. Later land fill and landmarks are included for reference.