Have dropped back onto the grid! have been off on a very random
holiday. Am running off to Glasgow "University" to do some "research"
for a few years, so don't think I'll be doing much more SHDC :(
Sorry i didn't get to say bye, will still be around Cambridge a bit,
so will drop by if the dates align! I hope SHDC becomes a success and
a legend :)
Rock on - tom/twak
On Sep 12, 6:26 pm, Simon Ford <simon.a.f...@googlemail.com> wrote:
Ok, looks like the SuperHappyDevClub october dates are best, so i'm
going to go for...
SHDC#9 - Saturday 18th October @ 2pm
I'll run it at my house (for those who don't know the address, just
give me an email)
Now, some rules...
The first rule of SHDC is, its ok to talk about SHDC. So feel free to
invite anyone you know who might be in to this sort of thing. More
people, more ideas, more fun.
The second rule of SHDC is, you should have an idea of what you are
going to try and do *before* you arrive. Even if it then goes out the
window when you start speaking to people and something much cooler
evolves. Helps avoid procrastination; save that for work.
The third rule of SHDC is, we should have to sustenance we need to
make it through to the early hours. So feel free to bring drinks/
snacks/cake along! If people are up for it, perhaps we could pool some
money to cover some takeaways and a beer run? Happy for ideas/
suggestions here.
The forth rule of SHDC is, feel free to bring along any CDs/iPods you
fancy; its always cool to hear new music.
Thats the rules done.
So if you are planning to come along, how about replying to this mail
introducing yourself (especially if you are new!) giving a brief
summary of what project you might be working on, and any ideas/
suggestions about food/drink or anything else :)
On Sat, Oct 4, 2008 at 9:02 AM, Simon Ford <simon.a.f...@googlemail.com>wrote:
> Ok, looks like the SuperHappyDevClub october dates are best, so i'm > going to go for...
> SHDC#9 - Saturday 18th October @ 2pm
> I'll run it at my house (for those who don't know the address, just > give me an email)
> So if you are planning to come along, how about replying to this mail > introducing yourself (especially if you are new!) giving a brief > summary of what project you might be working on, and any ideas/ > suggestions about food/drink or anything else :)
Should we do the introduction bit on the wiki? Maybe a 'People' page? I would've done it but it looks like you need to have an account for the wiki...
> See you on the 18th! And pass it on...
I should be able to make it on the 18th. Looking forward to it.
I'm Jonny Austin. I'm a student doing Engineering (just finished 2nd year - still to do much actually practical!) and I've been a couple of times before. This time I think I will try and work on getting a Psion Series 5 Keyboard to work as a USB keyboard.
It's pretty new territory for me, so if anyone has useful tools or reading material for getting started and pointing me in the right direction, please let me know (/bring them along). If anyone is taking a really keen interest, it has been done before:
I've also been thinking over some possible designs for a way to make a componentised (perhaps over dbus) parser-thingy to pick up dates, to-do tasks, names of documents on the filesystem, contacts in your address book, etc that appear in text that you're reading/editing... The idea is to make it available to all apps and easy to write 'plugins' for. I'm just at a 'talk it over' stage so if anyone's interested in desktop environment level Linux, or generally software design perhaps we can talk about that.
As for food, I've got a voucher for 50% off at Pizza Hut (delivery) when you spend more than £25, an identical twin of which has worked fine before... so that's an option... I'll bring it along.
> So if you are planning to come along, how about replying to this mail > introducing yourself (especially if you are new!) giving a brief > summary of what project you might be working on, and any ideas/ > suggestions about food/drink or anything else :)
I'm new here - Hoping to make it. Been living in Cambridge for a year or so - being an internet/systems guy mostly. I like to make electric things go beep and blurp and so forth.
I have just this evening received the free datafile sample CD from the Royal Mail, containing a sample file formatted like their PAF (postcode address file). You know when you order things from a website and they ask you for just your postcode & house number? This sits at the backend. The dataset is not-free (50 quid for a 1 user license, getting big quickly), but they'll give you set to develop against for nowt. No postage either, obviously. I'm planning to write a wee parser that will put this into an RDBMS or at least a B-tree, because it looks like it's just the raw sequential records dumped off a mainframe.
I think my plan is to have a go at learning some of these javascript
packages (prototype, scriptaculous, jquery) to see what they are
capable of, and hopefully then use them as a way to quickly prototype
some interface experiments.
The main use is for an idea i'm hoping to try an kick-start soon; a
form of schema-less database for embedded devices to push data to,
with a way to query and aggregate information from it (probably
doesn't sound very exciting like that, but i think the idea could be
really powerful if i get it right). Whilst most of it is mapped out, I
haven't quite got the approach to query part straight in my head yet,
so i'm hoping coming from the angle of trying to build an interface to
create queries might help identify a few key principles.
I'll also have various tools/soldering iron/hardware knocking about,
and might bring some robot bits (perhaps my broken big trak?!) for
when the need to fiddle with real things kicks in. Please bring
whatever toys/things/etc you have to show/share :) And if that isn't
enough, maybe i'll try and design something 3D for that online place
henry mentioned to make :)
> The main use is for an idea i'm hoping to try an kick-start soon; a > form of schema-less database for embedded devices to push data to, > with a way to query and aggregate information from it (probably > doesn't sound very exciting like that, but i think the idea could be > really powerful if i get it right). Whilst most of it is mapped out, I > haven't quite got the approach to query part straight in my head yet, > so i'm hoping coming from the angle of trying to build an interface to > create queries might help identify a few key principles.
Sounds like the old soup concept from the Apple Newton. Might be interesting to dig out some of the old NewtonScript documentation?
On Sat, 2008-10-04 at 01:02 -0700, Simon Ford wrote: > The second rule of SHDC is, you should have an idea of what you are > going to try and do *before* you arrive. Even if it then goes out the > window when you start speaking to people and something much cooler > evolves. Helps avoid procrastination; save that for work.
My plan is to produce a breakout board, and hook it up to the mbed widget which is going to be the controller, then get a couple of them talking to each other. If I can, try to get an audio profile working.
> On Sat, Oct 4, 2008 at 9:02 AM, Simon Ford <simon.a.f...@googlemail.com>wrote:
>> Ok, looks like the SuperHappyDevClub october dates are best, so i'm >> going to go for...
>> SHDC#9 - Saturday 18th October @ 2pm
> It's pretty new territory for me, so if anyone has useful tools or reading > material for getting started and pointing me in the right direction, please > let me know (/bring them along). If anyone is taking a really keen interest, > it has been done before:
I'm trying to track down an oscilloscope so I can do some probing on a working Psion to get an idea of what the keyboard is actually doing. Does anyone who was planning on driving have one they feel like sharing for an afternoon?
> On Sat, Oct 4, 2008 at 7:39 PM, Jonathan Austin <j.m.aus...@gmail.com>wrote:
> > On Sat, Oct 4, 2008 at 9:02 AM, Simon Ford <simon.a.f...@googlemail.com>wrote:
> >> Ok, looks like the SuperHappyDevClub october dates are best, so i'm
> >> going to go for...
> >> SHDC#9 - Saturday 18th October @ 2pm
> > It's pretty new territory for me, so if anyone has useful tools or reading
> > material for getting started and pointing me in the right direction, please
> > let me know (/bring them along). If anyone is taking a really keen interest,
> > it has been done before:
> I'm trying to track down an oscilloscope so I can do some probing on a
> working Psion to get an idea of what the keyboard is actually doing. Does
> anyone who was planning on driving have one they feel like sharing for an
> afternoon?
> On Sat, Oct 4, 2008 at 9:02 AM, Simon Ford <simon.a.f...@googlemail.com>wrote:
> > Ok, looks like the SuperHappyDevClub october dates are best, so i'm
> > going to go for...
> > SHDC#9 - Saturday 18th October @ 2pm
> > I'll run it at my house (for those who don't know the address, just
> > give me an email)
> > So if you are planning to come along, how about replying to this mail
> > introducing yourself (especially if you are new!) giving a brief
> > summary of what project you might be working on, and any ideas/
> > suggestions about food/drink or anything else :)
> Should we do the introduction bit on the wiki? Maybe a 'People' page? I
> would've done it but it looks like you need to have an account for the
> wiki...
> > See you on the 18th! And pass it on...
> I should be able to make it on the 18th. Looking forward to it.
> I'm Jonny Austin. I'm a student doing Engineering (just finished 2nd year -
> still to do much actually practical!) and I've been a couple of times
> before. This time I think I will try and work on getting a Psion Series 5
> Keyboard to work as a USB keyboard.
> It's pretty new territory for me, so if anyone has useful tools or reading
> material for getting started and pointing me in the right direction, please
> let me know (/bring them along). If anyone is taking a really keen interest,
> it has been done before:
> I've also been thinking over some possible designs for a way to make a
> componentised (perhaps over dbus) parser-thingy to pick up dates, to-do
> tasks, names of documents on the filesystem, contacts in your address book,
> etc that appear in text that you're reading/editing... The idea is to make
> it available to all apps and easy to write 'plugins' for. I'm just at a
> 'talk it over' stage so if anyone's interested in desktop environment level
> Linux, or generally software design perhaps we can talk about that.
> As for food, I've got a voucher for 50% off at Pizza Hut (delivery) when you
> spend more than £25, an identical twin of which has worked fine before... so
> that's an option... I'll bring it along.