![]() ![]() Travis Armknecht has 3 posts and counting.JPG is a commonly used method of lossy compression for digital images, particularly those produced by digital photography. Louis city Bevo neighborhood with his wife and their young son. He has a BA in theater and journalism from Concordia University in Nebraska and an MA from Webster University in Teaching Communication Arts, with an emphasis in Media Literacy. Louis-based journalism teacher non-profit organization. He is also the treasurer and co-president of journalismSTL, a St. In 2016 he was named the Missouri Journalism Education Association Rising Star and was named a national JEA Rising Star in 2017. Armknecht is a Certified Journalism Educator – a national certification designation from the Journalism Education Association. Now in its fifth year, GCAA Student Media is a fully converged staff that works on the Expression yearbook, website, and new GCAAtv broadcast program. He founded the school's journalism program in 2013 with a small group of sophomores who worked tirelessly after school to create the school’s first-ever yearbook. Armknecht has taught at GCAA since 2012, when he was the first high school English teacher hired at the school. Travis Armknecht is a high school English, journalism and speech teacher and the adviser of GCAA Student Media at Grand Center Arts Academy in a 6 through 12 visual and performing arts charter school in the heart of St. Since this was a bit complicated for some students to follow, I created this brief walkthrough above to show them how to do it and uploaded it to our Basecamp so they could always review it if they forgot. BUT, if they uploaded from the Photos app using the share sheet (the little square with the arrow sticking out of the top of it that can be found throughout the Apple ecosystem), the phone would automatically convert the image to a jpg during the upload. If a student opened the Google Drive app, navigated to their staff folder and then uploaded within the app, the images retained the heic format. We discovered that how a photo was uploaded to Drive made all the difference. They all have the Drive app on their phones to upload photos to shared folders where the editor and I can access them. While at first I thought it had to do with the phone model, it turned out it all had to do with how the kiddo initially uploaded the photo to Google Drive. While trying to find a solution, I discovered that some staff members with iPhones had to convert their images, others did not. Students use their phones for photography when it isn’t efficient to run to find me and get a key to the equipment cabinet to borrow a camera, or when the cameras are both in use by other staffers, or when they just need a few mugshots. Granted, all of this could be avoided if students didn’t use their phones for photography, but I have to DSLR cameras to loan out and, let’s face it, the best camera is the one you have on you at the time. There are plenty of websites that will convert the files to jpg but since we primarily house our photos in Google Drive, that added an extra step requiring students to download the photo from Drive on their computer, upload it to the conversion site, redownload it and then finally upload it to WordPress or our yearbook site. While it is possible to turn the format off by going to Settings>Camera>Formats and selecting Most Compatible, most will probably prefer to keep their phones on the High Efficiency format to save space. This format is also what allows a user to pick an individual frame from those live photos to use as a still image. The High Efficiency Image Container file format is what allows iPhone users to save live photos (essentially mini videos) without completely killing their storage. In 2017 with the rollout of iOS 11, Apple introduced a new default format they used to save photos. The culprit we discovered is the HEIC file. Like many advisers, this fall my students encountered an issue with getting photos they’d taken on their iPhones to upload to our website or online yearbook software.
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