Sourceforge meets Robosapien
Friday, March 24th, 2006What happens when code dorks meet robots? Well they naturally enslave them to be commanded them with their voice.

See video here
Congratulations on SourceForge Project of the Month May 2005.
What happens when code dorks meet robots? Well they naturally enslave them to be commanded them with their voice.

See video here
Congratulations on SourceForge Project of the Month May 2005.
I admit that it took me a while to get around to using RSS. I never saw the point until I tried it, at which point I realized it’s purpose: It provides a uniform interface for many heterogenious websites. I don’t have to browse the front page of all sorts of sites, with RSS I can just see the headlines (and my choice of either the full article or summary) and tell them to open in my browser.

I’ve been using Thunderbird to check my multiple mail accounts for years and I’m very happy with it. I keep most of my mail archived so its a slightly big task. I saw that it handled RSS accounts and I used it as my first real feed reader.
Unfortunately the way I had it configured it slowed my thunderbird down tremendously, and I chose to drop it. My thunderbird on XP memory usage dropped from ~110 MB to ~50. Now I’m giving FeedReader and RSS Bandit a try. They are also open-source projects. I’ll try to post back with my opinions on it after a decent trial period.
I guess I just want my RSS seperate from my mail for speed. The two tasks are too seperate and in my opinion thunderbird shouldn’t do all of them. I’d like to see mozilla spin off a seperate RSS reader application with the some of the same features as thunderbird.
In a related story, Ion Sancho, the Florida Elections Supervisor who witnesssed the Harri Hurtsi Hack has been threatened with a lawsuit for not meeting the county deadline for getting new voting machines.
“Florida’s secretary of state’s office disparaged Sancho’s finding, demonstrating considerably more interest in propping up vendors than protecting elections.”
I guess no good deed goes unpunished.
UPDATE: Click here to write the state officials in Florida to protest the treatment of Ion Sancho.
Susan Pynchon, a member of Florida Coalition for Fair Elections, has a very powerful piece on CounterPunch.org, where she describes witnessing the Harri Hursti Hack, when he proved to Ion Sancho (The Leon County Supervisor of Elections) that the Diebold machines in use could be hacked.
A snippet:
“It was a powerful moment and, I will admit, it had the unexpected result for me personally of causing me to break down and cry. Why did I cry? It was the last thing I thought I would do, but it happened for so many reasons. I cried because it was so clear that Diebold had been lying. I cried because there was proof, before my very eyes, that these machines were every bit as bad as we all had feared. I cried because we have been so unjustly attacked as “conspiracy theorists” and “technophobes” when Diebold knew full well that its voting system could alter election results. More than that, that Diebold planned to have a voting system that could alter results. And I cried because it suddenly hit me, like a Mack truck, that this was proof positive that our democracy is and has been, as we have all feared, truly at the mercy of unscrupulous vendors who are producing electronic voting machines that can change election results without detection.”
The piece goes through the whole process in detail. The voting system must be open sourced and verified by the security community before it can be used. It is also probable that a paper ballot will always be needed as a check mechanism.
The Nokia 770 is a very exciting product to me. It brings mobility and wireless connectivity together with an open source operating system.
I’m very happy to see that DougT over at Mozilla has gotten Minimo, the cut-down version of a Mozilla browser (presumably firefox), running on the 770. See here, its a beautiful thing:
Congratulations to the Students at Mount Saint Vincent University, who have got software by Turnitin banned because it allegedly brought about punishment which was too severe, automatically presumed guilt and created a climate of fear.
They also aired fears that the PATRIOT act provisions would cause the papers to be subject to searches under the Patriot Act and students were worried about intellectual property right issues.
As a fan of re-use and collaboration and thereby libraries and open source software, I think it’s easy for professors and administrators to put too much faith in computerized cheating detection. Determining when someone’s use of other material is inappropriate or against the rules is very difficult and should be left to humans with reasoning skills.
While I was a student at UF, the professors in the CISE department would say they ran all of our programs through MOSS and they regularly caught people cheating. Perhaps this type of thing will spread.

This took me by surprise. AOL has long been a closed lip, closed source company…usually they just leave people high and dry without any information. Now I’d guess gaim and trillian can expland their working feature set to include file transfers, etc.
So what is their motivation to open up? Is is pressure from GoogleTalk? Are they worried that Micro$oft will lock them out of the handset market with their next gen Windows Mobile + MSN client? Maybe its Skypebay thats worrying them, or the cellular companies building SIP networks.
Whatever it is, I am very very happy to see this and I applaude the manager who made this decision. A few more good deeds like these and I may forgive them for killing Nullsoft Winamp, Netscape and Mirabilis ICQ.