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Wednesday, March 31, 2010 - 12:59
The ARDevMob Spring Open Developer Challenge

The #ARSpringOpen

On April 24th and 25th ARDevMob will hold an augmented hackathon event
at The PariSoma Innovation Loft in San Francisco California.
Developers will form teams and compete to create the best Mobile and
Web Applications. To qualify applications must contain a "mixed
reality" or "alternative interface" which utilizes a web or cellphone
camera. This is a trial run for a larger global event we are holding
in June.

From March 24th to April 24th The ARDevMob will be touring local user
groups, clubs and meetups promoting the ARSpringOpen and presenting
tutorials for Flash, iPhone, Android and more. These sessions will
prepare you to join a team in our trial run on April 24th and 25th.
Look for the ARDevMob Spring Training logo at your local development
group. There will be prizes at each Spring Training event. The grand
prize at the trials on the 24th is a SpringDesign Alex ebook reader,
or Nexus One. More prizes to be announced.

Registration for the ARSpringOpen begins soon. Follow @ARDevMob on
twitter or sign up at ARDevMob.com for updates.

Posted via email from ARDevMob

Friday, February 12, 2010 - 11:50
It changes everything it touches and everything it touches changes

This is a valuable article, it covers augmented reality, mobile technologies, public art and uses some interesting examples from Burning Man, the San Francisco Bay Area Silicon Valley.

I don't think anyone quite believes the internet eats everything it touches the way some used to, though "change" hits the mark. It is a compelling article, the internet does change everything it touches and very soon it will touch everything, ready or not.

http://www.ugotrade.com/2010/02/10/the-physical-world-becomes-a-software-construct-talking-with-brady-forrest-about-where-2-0-2010/

Posted via email from The Sid Gabriel Post

Tuesday, December 8, 2009 - 23:54
One Day These Boys Will Make Robots

Lately I've been feeling my nature is working against me a bit. People have mentioned that my blog doesn't look like a blog, I was even told by someone that I was a commercial blog. I assure you, there is not a single piece of paid content or advertising in this entire site.

To be more blog-like, I am going to subject you to home movies of my nephews. I am responsible for them and I am doing everything I can to build a bridge between The Philippines and Silicon Valley so they can attend a good University and build robots for the company that I haven't started yet. That bridge, of course, starts with their minds.

Brandon and Grey

This is a video of my nephews, Brandon and Grey, explaining object relational mapping (though they might not know engineers call it that).

When my custom dry-erase system arrived they asked "what's that for?" I said "let me show you" and made up a game:

1. On the opaque board, draw every item from the anime series "Dennou Coil" that you think is important and a map of the area most of the show takes place. This will be called the media board.

2. On another board, write a numbered list containing all the items, places and characters in the show. Make sure each row is unique and there are no duplicates. This will be called the list board.

3. Roll one of the clear dry erase boards over the opaque board with the drawings. This will be our relational layer.

4. Starting with the first item on the list board, write the item's number on the relational layer over each image that the item has interacted with. If the item is a place, write the number on the map of the area the show takes place in.

5. Roll the relational layer away from the media board. Circle the 3 largest groups of numbers. Roll the layer back over the media board. The three circled items are the critical elements of the show.

When they were done I had them explain it in this video. Though they argue over the quality of the data, they understood the exercise and completed it without effort.

They are brilliant, and like me, they can write forwards and backwards with both hands. Though I'm the only one who can simultaneously write with both hands. (for now)

The Observatory

That is the future site of my observatory. A lab that will enable me to work and manage my efforts from The Philippines. A laptop isn't sufficient for the work I do. I swing a heavy bat. I'll use as much processor power, bandwidth and [quiet] as I can get. Having a lab there will enable me to continue to build that bridge, while I help raise Brandon and Grey.

The College

The free community college the mayor has sponsored plays the all important role of having a place to go other than the lab, and also a key role in the bridge.

Teaching Teachers

This is the computer department. I taught an intro to Java class last time I was there. 5 teachers, 2 admins and 1 student. It was fun, a flash in the pan. I'm eager to return and get some real work done. These guys could generate at peak 1k developers a year. If the buildings would stay still.

The Roadmap

It's a multidimensional problem. I'm good at those. The answer takes 10 years and looks generally like this:

1 Develop a business that facilitates living part time in the Philippines and Silicon Valley.

2 Use my time in the Philippines to support the community college and cultivate a valuable means of production for next generation technologies. Use the value in the means of production to attract sponsors for the school.

3 Build a relationship with a University in Silicon Valley enabling the best and brightest in the community college in The Philippines to transfer to an undergraduate program in Silicon Valley.

4 Tend the bridge for 6 years.

5 Buy a home in the Santa Cruz mountains

6 Watch Brandon and Grey walk across the bridge in their own right. The benefit of 6 years of study.

7 Have them live with me while they finish their education.

8 Use year 6 through 10 of the business mentioned in step 1 to spin off a scrappy robotics division that if run right could do pretty well.

9 Give them a shot at their dreams.

That's the plan. Everything I have done since August has been in the service of this roadmap. It is flexible, yet I am not. You'll rarely find me working on anything else.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - 01:14
CivicDB Is A Win For Open Data, Tim Berners Lee

San Francisco, CA - Last Saturday, September 12th, I decided to spend my birthday at an all day design and programming session with CivicDB - A new project inspired by President Obama's January 21st Memo and endorsed by the City of San Francisco.

The meeting attracted developers, gurus and normal citizens wanting to aid in the creation of a free and open database of San Francisco's city government information.

San Francisco City and County Department of Technology's CTO Blair Adams (whose published slideshows make me proud to live in SF) and Jay Nath, the department's manager of research and development organized the event on Meetup.com with the help of Csaba Csoma, a developer from the communty and organizer of the CivicDB meetup group.

  Jamie Taylor, co-author of O'Reilly's Programming the Semantic Web and Minister of Information at Metaweb Technologies made a presentation about Freebase - The community driven database of the world's free and open data.

During the course of the day many different architectures were discussed but the support for the Semantic Web and formats like RDF was clear. This is a win for those who use Linked Open Data - the very real and almost mature semantic web of data that Tim Berners-Lee began fostering a few years after he invented The World Wide Web. 

The SF Data Wiki contains information on the CivicDB Project's scope, roadmap and architecture. Some side-benefits of the project show up in the diagrams. For example, the diagram below shows the data flow through a city department and then out into CivicDB. Implementation in city departments will introduce much needed data standards which will allow more simple interoperation of city departments in the longer term.

I think this project is a big win for open data and the citizens of San Francisco. Seeing our City Government and local development community openly discussing how we should publish our data and how to build solutions together as a team made my day.

To get involved, visit www.civicdb.org

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