«Para contar la historia de los residentes de las torres de apartamentos de Canadá reinventando sus casas en el cielo, los creadores de la nueva película One Millionth Tower reinventaron el formato documental«, escribe Wired. La película, que hace su estreno online, fue diseñada cuidadosamente para ser vista en Internet. Utiliza herramientas interactivas para ilustrar las ideas de los residentes de Toronto acerca de cómo mejorar la descomposición de las torres de apartamentos en las que viven. Desarrollado enteramente por HTML5 y bibliotecas de código abierto de JavaScript, One Millionth Tower está llena de fotos e información de toda la web, y existe en un entorno online que es lo más cercano a tres dimensiones que una pantalla plana puede conseguir.
«Hemos añadido una nueva capa a la web y One Millionth Tower es uno de los primeros ejemplos de eso», dijo Mark Surman, director ejecutivo de la Fundación Mozilla, la fuerza detrás del kit de herramientas Popcorn.js que potencia la película. «De la misma manera que todos nosotros nos emocionamos mucho cuando se puedo destacar una palabra en una página y crear un hipervínculo … eso está pasando ahora con la película. Pienso que este es el primer gran documental hecho en la web «.
+ documental
+ artículo publicado en ikono
“To tell the story of Canadian high-rise residents reinventing their homes in the sky, the makers of new film One Millionth Tower reinvented the documentary format” writes Wired. The movie, which makes its online premiere above, was carefully crafted to be watched on the internet. It uses interactive tools to illustrate the Toronto residents’ ideas about how to improve the decaying high-rise in which they live. Powered entirely by HTML5 and open source JavaScript libraries, One Millionth Tower is loaded with photos and information from all over the web, and exists in an online environment that is about as close to three-dimensional as something on a flat screen can get.
“We’ve added an entire new layer to the web and One Millionth Tower is one of the first examples of that,” said Mark Surman, executive director of the Mozilla Foundation, the force behind the Popcorn.js toolkit that powers the film. “In the same way we all got really excited when you could highlight a word on a page and create a hyperlink … that’s happening now with film. I think of this as the first real web-made documentary.”
+ documental
+ artigo publicado en ikono
“To tell the story of Canadian high-rise residents reinventing their homes in the sky, the makers of new film One Millionth Tower reinvented the documentary format” writes Wired. The movie, which makes its online premiere above, was carefully crafted to be watched on the internet. It uses interactive tools to illustrate the Toronto residents’ ideas about how to improve the decaying high-rise in which they live. Powered entirely by HTML5 and open source JavaScript libraries, One Millionth Tower is loaded with photos and information from all over the web, and exists in an online environment that is about as close to three-dimensional as something on a flat screen can get.
“We’ve added an entire new layer to the web and One Millionth Tower is one of the first examples of that,” said Mark Surman, executive director of the Mozilla Foundation, the force behind the Popcorn.js toolkit that powers the film. “In the same way we all got really excited when you could highlight a word on a page and create a hyperlink … that’s happening now with film. I think of this as the first real web-made documentary.”
+ documentary
+ article is published in ikono





