On Wed, 15 Aug 2012 10:02:53 -0400, Debbi <
ab...@hwsbi.com> wrote:
>On 8/14/2012 2:33 PM, Keane wrote:
>> On Tue, 14 Aug 2012 12:01:50 -0400, Debbi <
ab...@hwsbi.com> wrote:
>>
>> So.... The obvious follow-up question from someone like me...
>> How's Disney's facial recognition software doing these days? ;-)
>
>Obvious why ?
I will even say this time I don't think it's about guest tracking.
It really is about transportation requirements. But it has to be a
boon for Disney Security too. I mean the dives to the Titanic
was perfect cover for another operation too...
>I had better not be too specific but let's just say that what we have
>been testing rivals most Las Vegas casinos. The whole new 'deep'
>security thing around here is another book just waiting to be written.
I know Disney is waaaay secretive about security, but I can only
guess. And don't say anytime more, 'cause Mickey'll get hackled.
Years ago I had always wondered how in the world they'd be able
to prevent a banned-for-lifer from getting back on resort property,
but that was years ago... Now it's so doable, it's frightening.
Even my G12 has the ability to recognize a half-dozen faces in frame
and will allow me to focus on any one of those faces. Some refinement
and I bet it comes close to a fingerprint...
>>> But I have to say <snip>
>
>> I have witnessed many a project fail due to over complexity; lack of
>> foresight or planning; and the lack of specific specifications or
>> expectations.
>
>As always, they should have given me the whole project. My success rate
>is pretty good (as long as we don't include those tiny, little pyro
>goof-ups, which reminds me - did you see the footage of the 7/4
>fireworks in San Diego ? Could have used me there too ... but I digress)
LOL.
"Doing continuity test..."
(Very large explosions for several seconds later...)
"Crap."
I remember some youtube comments like "Best fireworks, ever!",
so don't think it wouldn't go unappreciated... As a matter of fact,
if you could arrange an Illuminations like that for me when I'm there
sometime, it'd be really different!
>> I had a friend that was doing some real-time software for United
>> at DIA (Denver's airport). Unrelated to his work, they were going to
>> have this great automated luggage system. You put a bag on a cart,
>> and the cart was supposed to know where it was supposed to go to
>> deliver the luggage.
>>
>> Problem was, some of the carts never made it to their destination.
>> He said they'd find bunches of carts huddled together someplace
>> where they shouldn't have been. They never figured it out. DIA has
>> a more traditional luggage sorting system now...
>
>I read about that. Sometimes I read about software that simply blows my
>socks off (when I wear them, which is rare) and then I wonder what could
>have been so hard about routing a bunch of luggage ?
Well, the problem is, it probably all worked in testing.
But when you move everything into the real world, there are so many
variable introduced, you might never find the problem.
Software? Could be. Having dozens of people working on the code,
with some leaving and other trying to figure out what previous coders
did (I did that in a former lifetime...sucks...), sometimes software
becomes unmanageable because of lack of foresight and structure.
Hardware? Could be. Maybe the control box components are substandard
and heat within specifications resets the coordinates they think
they're supposed to go to. Remember the fountain problem at that
hotel in Vegas? Nozzles would stop because ice would form due to
the pressures involved, but when they went into the fountain to check
what the problem could be, the ice had melted and there was no
problem...
Outside interference? Sabotage from the losing contractor or
PO'd insider? They just didn't know, couldn't figure it out.
Major fail.
>> So, it *is* still Hyperion Wharf? I was being questioned on that...
>
>Who knows ? Another mess that has changed hands more times than a
>newborn baby at a family gathering. We still call it that and the legal
>papers that were filed are still valid so until that changes, Hyperion
>Wharf it is !
>
>ab
Like mating elephants, huh?
And there you have it. The most definitive proof from a reliable
source that it still might be called Hyperion Wharf!
Good enough for me...