The next AuckLUG meeting is scheduled for Tuesday 1 May, 2012.
Currently, we don't have anyone with time to run a presentation, so the format of the
next meeting will be an "Interesting projects" meeting, open to everyone.
If you have an interesting Linux related project you would like to share, please bring
along a few slides on it, or something to talk about. Time slots per speaker will be
limited to 10 - 20 minutes.
To kick things off, Glen will present a 15 minute slot on the NetStora MS2000, which is
a Linux based home NAS.
Meeting details:
What: Interesting projects - open to everyone to present
Date: Tuesday 1 May 2012
Time: 7pm until 9pm.
Where:
OSS, Level 1, 162 Grafton Road,
Auckland - (The Compass Building, corner of Grafton Rd and Khyber Pass)
Open Street Map: http://www.openstreetmap.org/?mlat=-36.863399&mlon=174.764503&zoom=16
Google maps: http://g.co/maps/fdrw6
Other details:
OSS will provide Tea and Coffee at the meeting.
Parking available on the street. Feel free to turn up 10 minutes early, as we
do try and kick of the actual presentation at 7:00 pm.
If you turn up after 7:15 pm, you will need to call a mobile number on
the door to be let in.
Usually a bunch of people meet for a some food around 6:00 - 6:15 pm
before the meeting at Betsia Kebabs, 199 Symonds St. If your keen on
meeting for dinner, then please reply to the list so others know who
is going for dinner.
Regards
Glen Ogilvie
021 684 146
It will initially be run on a server which runs Fedora and co-hosted
with one of my existing web sites. There is a lot which I will need to
learn before I get started.
I was thinking about making this a FLOSS project but the amount of
effort required to get other participants is likely to be greater than
the amount of effort required to do the whole thing myself.
I would like to give a brief (10 minute) presentation so that I can get
suggestions as to what "tools", including programming languages, I
should start learning.
Don Johnston
I was thinking about making this a FLOSS project but the amount of effort required to get other participants is likely to be greater than the amount of effort required to do the whole thing myself.
- J
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I'll be attending.
Not strictly Linux related, but I'll bring along the debug/trace stuff
I've been working on for ARM Cortex micros. I can give an unprepared
demo if anyone is interested.
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I would advise against javascript for it as the entire script would have to be downloaded every page load.
It would be easily hackable,
and any user can see the code (only an issue if it's not open source.)
I would instead advise using javascript only for AJAX so you have the actions performed as the user typed (as above,) but have the code stored and running server side.
Glen Ogilvie
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These are very good as far as they go and so is Algebrator which is a commercial product:
http://www.softmath.com/pmath.html
The problem with these is scope; they only handle some types of problems. They do, however, give me ideas for my project which is aimed at dealing with most types of problems in algebra, trigonometry and calculus and a smaller proportion of problems in other branches of secondary school maths.
Javascript certainly looks like an option which I should look into thoroughly. I notice that it supports functional programming.
Can anyone think of any disadvantages of using Javascript for my project?
If 'never trusting the client,' then wouldn't the engine have to be written twice, probably in two different languages?
On the 'hackable' topic, it occurs to me that a smart student /could/
write a script to extract the problem from the page, clean it up, feed
it to Wolfram Alpha and then feed the result back to the page.