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- Accelerating the journey to 1.0. 05 April 2019. Nick O'Leary. There are also a number of threads of activity on items that didn’t feature in the original roadmap, including: Subflows Properties UI - allow a subflow to define its own custom UI to set its instance properties.
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Our roadmap to version 1.0 was publishedin July 2017. It described a set of themes we wanted to address within the project,along with the functional items we decided were necessary to get there.
Since then we’ve made gradual progress through the roadmap with three milestonereleases containing many of its features. But there are still a number of featuresoutstanding and at the current course and speed, it would be another 6 months toget them done.
Having shipped the 0.20 release with the runtime/editor split work complete, we’vebeen discussing how we can get to 1.0 sooner. We’ve been challenging theassumptions that underpinned the roadmap to see if they still held true.
![Original journey 1.0 movie Original journey 1.0 movie](/uploads/1/2/6/1/126129515/123926639.jpg)
The key realisation is that 1.0 is not the end of the project. It is just anotherrelease, albeit one that rightly signifies the maturity of the project.
The main concept with the 1.0 roadmap was to get to a point of functional ‘completeness’and API stability.
Functional ‘completeness’
This means we’ve addressed the major gaps of functionality that users have fedback to us. This is focussed on the larger items - pieces that have to be addressedin the core runtime, rather than as incremental enhancements to the existing nodes.
Projects (0.18), Persistable Context (0.19) and Subflow Instance Properties (0.20)all fall into this criteria. Each of those addresses very specific requirementsand greatly enhance what users can build with Node-RED.
API Stability
Whenever we add new features to the runtime, they introduce new APIs and extensionpoints. As more users look to integrate Node-RED with their existing applications,or to customise it for their own needs, there is a real need to have a stable API.
The Runtime/Editor split (0.20) work was the major item here - it has exposedmore of the internal components of Node-RED with APIs that can be reused. There’smore to be done to properly document those APIs and provide more concrete examplesof how they can be used, but the technical work has been done.
![Original Journey 1.0 Original Journey 1.0](/uploads/1/2/6/1/126129515/858826556.jpg)
What’s left?
There are three items from the original roadmap that have not yet been delivered:
- Library Redesign - an overhaul of the built-in library experience; one of theoldest bits of the Node-RED user experience that has not had much attention.
- Pluggable Message Routing - the ability to plug custom code into how messagesare passed between nodes.
- New Message API - an update to how nodes handle messages that will enable theruntime to track better what nodes are doing and enable features such as automaticallytiming out a node.
Work has started to various degrees on all three, from high-level design work toactual code contributions. But they all have more work to be done.
There are also a number of threads of activity on items that didn’t feature inthe original roadmap, including:
- Subflows Properties UI - allow a subflow to define its own custom UI to setits instance properties
- Integrated Flow Testing - being able to define test cases for your flows in theeditor and have a test-runner that can be used to validate them
- Flow Linter - a command-line tool that can be used to validate a flow basedon a set of rules about what a flow should and shouldn’t do
The risk we have, with all of this activity going on, is that we keep finding‘one more thing’ to do before getting to 1.0. Each new item brings a risk ofdestabilising what we have and adding more time into the plan. What is toast 10 titanium.
Changing the plan
With all of this in mind, we’re going to do some reprioritisation to ensure we’refocussed only on what is absolutely necessary for 1.0.
Here’s what that means to the remaining roadmap features:
Library Redesign
This will provide a much needed cosmetic improvement to how users interact with thelibrary in the editor, but won’t introduce any new capabilities. The underlyingAPIs will largely remain the same.
We will not add the ability to plug-in other library sources in the 1.0 release, butthe UI changes will keep that in mind for the future.
Pluggable Message Routing
This feature is no longer in the plan for 1.0. By itself, it doesn’t add any valueto users. The real value comes with the things that can then be plugged in - suchas an interactive flow debugger. Rather than rush through a design for this itemit makes sense for it to be done after 1.0, when we can also work on some concreteuses for it in parallel
New Messaging API
We have had a design for this agreed for some time and there’s also a pull-requestthat implements that design sat waiting. But in the last couple of weeks we’veidentified some concerns that the new API is too big of a change for the valueit would bring. With 1900+ node modules published, we need to be careful overany change we introduce in this area. An alternative design is being discussedwhich is a much more modest change that provides most of the functionality needed.
Non-functional Changes
Dxo viewpoint 3.1.15.285. The 1.0 release is an opportunity to make a splash around the project. That willbring new users to the community so we need to make sure we have everything inplace to introduce them to Node-RED and help them get started.
So alongside the technical work for 1.0, we also want to give the website a cleanup, review our documentation and get more content into the cookbook. If you’re lookingfor ways to contribute to the project, but not sure about jumping into the code,there’s plenty to help with in this area.
When is 1.0?
The intention is for the next milestone release of Node-RED to be version 1.0.
The target is to have the first 1.0-beta release in mid-May with the final releaseavailable in early June.
And then?
As we said at the start, version 1.0 is not the end of the project - its thenext step forward in the project’s growth.
Alongside the release we’ll have a clear roadmap of the ongoing work to take usto the next milestone and beyond.
We’ll also have the results of our Community Survey to feed back into the plan -if you haven’t completed the survey yet, please do!
Journey Into Imagination with Figment | |
---|---|
Epcot | |
Area | Future World (2002-TBD) World Celebration(TBD-) |
Status | Operating |
Opening date | June 2, 2002 |
Replaced | Journey Into YOUR Imagination |
General statistics | |
Attraction type | Dark Ride |
Designer | Walt Disney Imagineering |
Music | One Little Spark |
Riders per vehicle | 7 (3 in the front; 4 in the back) |
Rows | 2 |
Duration | 6 minutes |
Host | Dr. Nigel Channing (Eric Idle) and Figment (Dave Goelz) |
Director | Garth Jennings |
Journey into Imagination with Figment is the third and latest incarnation of a dark ride attraction located within the Imagination! pavilion on the western side of Future World at Epcot, a theme park at the Walt Disney World Resort in Bay Lake, Florida. Originally opened on March 5, 1983, its original and current version feature the small purpledragon named Figment as well as the song 'One Little Spark,' composed by the Sherman Brothers.
2002: Journey into Imagination with Figment[edit]
The negative response to Journey into YOUR Imagination led to the ride being shut down and renovated once again after only 2 years. The attraction opened for its third and current iteration on June 2, 2002, as Journey into Imagination with Figment. Figment returned with a larger role, appearing in every show scene and the classic song 'One Little Spark' also returned with new verses, but the Dreamfinder was still absent.
This time, the Institute has five labs based on the five human senses: Sight, Sound, Smell, Touch, and Taste. Dr. Nigel Channing of the Imagination Institute (Eric Idle, from the previous incarnation) invites guests to the Institute’s open house. Figment (voiced by Dave Goelz) tags along, much to Channing’s dismay, and causes mischief along the way.
- In Sound, Figment interrupts the experiment and comes up with a telephone and the train sound from the previous version is now a 'Train of Thought.'
- In Sight, Figment knocks the letters off the room’s eye chart and begins a sing-along to 'One Little Spark.' The materializing butterfly from the old version was carried over from the previous version, but rather than appearing in the cage, the effect is now reversed so that the butterfly is hiding.
- In Smell, Figment becomes a skunk, which blasts the riders with a foul odor (which is actually a burnt coffee smell).
After seeing the chaos Figment has been causing, Channing stops the tour outside the Touch and Taste labs, abandoning the tour. Figment takes the riders to his own open house, which he literally turns upside down with his carefree mind. Channing soon learns from Figment that Imagination should be set free ('If you can't beat 'em, join 'em!') and the riders go into the finale with numerous Figments in various situations while Figment and Channing (Channing is seen as the moon) sing 'One Little Spark' together while riders disembark for the ImageWorks.
A homage to the initial incarnation of this attraction can be found on an office door in the initial showroom under the name 'Dean Finder,' alluding to 'Dreamfinder.'
Original Journey 1.0 Full
Both the 1999 and 2002 versions were created by Tom Fitzgerald.
The Kodak company ended its sponsorship of the pavilion in August 2010, after nearly 28 years.
Prior Versions[edit]
1983–1998: Journey into Imagination[edit]
Journey into Imagination | |
---|---|
Epcot | |
Area | Future World |
Status | Closed |
Opening date | March 5, 1983 |
Closing date | October 10, 1998 |
Replaced by | Journey Into YOUR Imagination |
General statistics | |
Attraction type | Dark Ride |
Designer | WED Enterprises |
Music | One Little Spark |
Vehicle type | Modified Omnimover |
Riders per vehicle | 7 (3 in the front, 4 in the back) |
Duration | 11 minutes |
Host | The Dreamfinder (Chuck McCann and Ron Schneider) and Figment (Billy Barty) |
The original attraction opened on March 5, 1983 and was the creation of Tony Baxter and Steve Kirk.[1]. It began with the omnimover vehicles “floating” in the clouds and seeing the silhouette of a strange blimp mixed with a vacuum cleaner and hearing the humming and singing of its pilot. In the next scene the riders come right next to this vessel and the pilot, an old man with a red beard dressed in a blue suit and top hat, introduces himself as the Dreamfinder (voiced by Chuck McCann and Ron Schneider) and saying that he uses his vehicle (called the Dream Mobile or Dream Catcher by some fans) to collect dreams and ideas to create all sorts of new things. Soon he creates a figment of his imagination: 'two tiny wings, eyes big and yellow, horns of a steer, but a lovable fellow! From head to tail, he's royal purple pigment, and there, voilà! You've got a Figment!' Both Dreamfinder and the dragon Figment (voiced by Billy Barty) imagine things to fill the 'idea bag.' When the idea bag is full, Dreamfinder declares that the ideas need to be emptied in the 'Dreamport' which, as he says, is 'never far away when you use your imagination.' [2]
Regarding the scene where Figment is introduced, Baxter said,
If you're telling the story of Little Mermaid or Snow White, everyone already knows who they are, what they talk like, how they sing, etc. But in a ride like Imagination, you're not familiar with the characters going into it. This opening scene allows you to meet Dreamfinder, understand how he created Figment, and get to know Figment's personality, so at the end of those four minutes you know the characters.[3]
The omnimovers leave the side of the Dream Mobile and enter the Dreamport’s storage room, which includes a massive contraption for sorting ideas. Also in the room there are numerous objects including boxed applause, a plasma ball, and a birdcage of musical notes. After leaving the storage room, the ride continued through several rooms representing Art, Literature, the Performing Arts and Science. The Art room was mostly white colored, and had a large painting Dreamfinder was making using a large fiber optic paint brush, a carousel with giant carousel animals and a pot of rainbows held by Figment.
The Literature room was mostly focused on suspenseful tales and had Dreamfinder playing a massive organ with words coming out of it, words that turned into their meanings, a massive book featuring the raven from Edgar Allan Poe’s poem cawing menacingly and books of horrible monsters Figment tried to keep closed. The Performing Arts had Figment trying on costumes backstage while Dreamfinder conducted a laser light show in the manner of an orchestra conductor. The last of the rooms, Science, featured a large machine that Dreamfinder was operating that took a closer look at the workings of nature such as the growth of plants, the formation of crystals from minerals and looking into space.
At the end, Dreamfinder told Figment and the audience that Imagination is the key to unlocking the hidden wonders of the world. The ride then entered the final show scene. As the riders' pictures were taken, they saw Figment surrounded by several movie screens of him being a scientist, a mountain climber, a pirate, a superhero, a tap dancer, a ship captain, a cowboy and an athlete. Dreamfinder, who is behind a movie camera, gave the riders one last inspiring message and told them to use their newly found sparks of imagination in the ImageWorks and the on-ride photo was shown on a screen next to the camera.
The ride closed on October 10, 1998 in order to begin a major renovation of the attraction.[2]
Steve Perry
1999–2001: Journey into YOUR Imagination[edit]
Journey into Your Imagination | |
---|---|
Epcot | |
Area | Future World |
Status | Closed |
Opening date | October 1, 1999 |
Closing date | October 8, 2001 |
Replaced | Journey Into Imagination |
Replaced by | Journey Into Imagination with Figment |
General statistics | |
Attraction type | Dark Ride |
Designer | Walt Disney Imagineering |
Riders per vehicle | 7 (3 in the front, 4 in the back) |
Duration | 5 minutes |
Host | Dr. Nigel Channing (Eric Idle) |
The attraction reopened on October 1, 1999 as Journey Into YOUR Imagination and featured an updated theme based on the 3-D movie Honey, I Shrunk the Audience (1994). Now guests would take a tour of the Imagination Institute and be test subjects for the new invention, the Imagination Scanner. Dr. Nigel Channing, played by Eric Idle, hosted this version.[2]
The ride began with guests going through the scanner and saying that the riders have no imagination. Then Channing decides to send us through the numerous labs throughout the Institute including Sound, Illusion, Color, Gravity and Connections. In the first room, Sound, the room starts out in total silence and complete darkness. Slowly, one can hear the sounds of cricket chirping, distant city noises, and an approaching train that comes closer and closer until it seems to pass over the audience’s heads. In the second room, Illusion, there is a fish swimming in and out of its tank and an empty cage with a butterfly that seems to materialize as riders go by. In the third room, the Color lab, there are sounds of jungle animals and cities that cause two large light screens to change colors matching the sounds. In the next room, Connections lab, the room is covered with numerous stars that soon form into constellations. Finally, in the Gravity lab, the riders enter an upside down house. For the finale, riders go through the Scanner again and find that their minds have been supercharged with ideas. The machine then 'explodes' and you see a light show.[citation needed]
Public opinion of Journey into YOUR Imagination was generally negative. Figment’s appearances in the experience were reduced to cameos in the queue movies, a constellation in the connection lab and at the end of the ride, where he is only heard, but is shooed off by Channing. Fans were mainly upset that the Dreamfinder, a popular character from the original ride, was not present in this version. Additionally, the ride path was drastically shortened due to budgetary issues. Because of this, the attraction closed on October 8, 2001 and again, went through another renovation.[2]
One Little Spark[edit]
Clip of the song as heard on the original attraction | |
Problems playing this file? See media help. |
'One Little Spark' is a song written by the Sherman Brothers for the original Journey Into Imagination attraction.[4]
While the song was performed (1981–1998) by audio-animatronic characters, Dreamfinder (voiced by Chuck McCann and Ron Schneider) and his creation Figment (voiced by Billy Barty), the 2002 version is performed by Dr. Nigel Channing (Eric Idle) with Figment (voiced by Dave Goelz).
References to Disney films[edit]
The 2002 revamp of the Journey into Imagination attraction includes several visual elements suggesting that the 'Imagination Institute' is connected to Medfield College, the setting of several live-action Disney films. The queue for the attraction passes the 'offices' of Professor Brainard (Fred MacMurray's role in The Absent-Minded Professor (1961), although the queue addressed the 1997 remake when the role was played by Robin Williams), Wayne Szalinski (Rick Moranis in the Honey, I Shrunk the Kids trilogy) and Dean Higgins (Joe Flynn's role in the Dexter Riley films). The ride includes further references to The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes, with a glass-fronted computer room, including a sign on the door indicating 'no tennis shoes allowed,' as well as a Medfield College letter-man's jacket can also be seen inside the room.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Geryak, Cole (October 27, 2016). 'Disney Extinct Attractions: Journey into (YOUR) Imagination'. Laughing Place. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
- ^ abcdHeigl, Jonathan (September 9, 2014). 'Remembering the Magic: Imagination! Pavilion'. Mouse Planet. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
- ^'Tony Baxter: A Conversation'. The MacGyver Project.
- ^'One Little Spark'. All Music. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
- Alcorn, Steve and David Green. Building a Better Mouse: The Story of the Electronic Imagineers Who Designed Epcot. Themeperks Press, 2007, ISBN0-9729777-3-2.
External links[edit]
Coordinates: 28°22′22.29″N81°33′5.06″W / 28.3728583°N 81.5514056°W
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