Just cracked open Multimedia Foundations for my Ferris State TDMP class, and here's the real tea ☕️. This book is like that patient professor who explains things twice without rolling their eyes. The condition? Flawless (though some reviewers got unlucky with shipping damage – always a gamble!).
The PROS hit different:
- Baby steps approach: If you think 'RGB' stands for 'Really Great Burgers,' Chapter 1 gently corrects you while teaching computer basics. Perfect for my classmates who still right-click to save images as .bmp files.
- Typography deep dive: The font chapter made me audibly gasp – did you know serif fonts originated from Roman stone carvings? My Instagram story about it got 37 likes.
- Visual candy: Sidebars and news broadcast examples keep it engaging. I actually laughed at the '90s webpage screenshot (RIP Comic Sans era).
The CONS sting a bit:
- 'Multimedia' means different things: Like one reviewer said, artists expecting fancy visual theory got basic communication principles instead. My graphic designer roommate side-eyed my excitement over the audio production chapter.
- Tantalizing dead ends: That promised companion website? Ghosted harder than my Tinder dates. Publisher says 'coming soon' – it's been 3 months.
- Skippable if advanced: Found myself speed-reading through camera settings sections (thanks, YouTube tutorials), but beginners will appreciate the hand-holding.
Real talk moment: This isn't gonna make you the next Spielberg, but when my professor mentioned 'vector vs raster,' I smugly nodded instead of Googling. For $35? Worth it just for that typography chapter alone – though I still can't pick the perfect font for my cat's LinkedIn profile.
*Update:* After spilling coffee on Chapter 5, can confirm pages are surprisingly absorbent. Unintended bonus feature.