Happy New Year! I got a present from my landlord...the order to move
out! My landlord is going to make destructive renovations (and then
he'll sell) so I've got to find a new place. I must be out by
mid-April, but earlier is possible so I'm looking for a workshop.
I never realised dry, secure garages were so rare in Dunedin! As many
of you know I have my own tiny business which does marine seafloor
research - often associated with research consent work - and a tiny bit
of engineering. We've been operating out of a little studio laboratory
(15 sq. m) and a Versatile garage (30 sq. m) for 5 years now. I could
either look for a house with lab/workshop space or find lab/workshop
space and somewhere cheap to live. I'm hoping to spend less than $300
on whatever combination. If anyone has any suggestions or leads on a
place to live and/or work, please drop me a line or give me a call, I
appreciate any thoughts you can share.
Cheers,
Brian H 476-1712 M 021-189-3459
I think it's awesome that we've had so many people on Thursdays and
Saturdays working on a couple of different projects. Like so many of us
I notice patterns. Like how almost every conversation contains the line
"you know...that guy who's doing the thing...you should get in touch
with him he's doing something similar...what's his name now?" or when
someone leaves the room "What was his name again?"
I feel like a goof wearing badges in an informal setting, but they exist
at conferences for a reason...it's great to meet new people and I'm
horrible at remembering names. Do we want name tags? I'll could bring
crafty and electronic bits materials some Thursday if we each want to
make our own (steampunk anyone?) or we could have a sticky roll of "Hi -
I'm [__________]" at the door.
Alternatively we could set up a webcam to take a photo of the people
walking through the door so that we could post on our membership page
just so you can match face and name discretely online.
Whatcha' think?
Cheers,
Brian
Those wee touch screens, press it and get a video intro,
"Hi, Barry, Sagittarius.
Civil engineer, long walks on the beach and peanut butter sandwiches..."
I've been thinking that too, I was going to mention it myself but I
was just waiting till I knew everyone.
It's alright if your there first, just one or two faces/names at a
time. But when you're new... 40 faces, 60 names?
Good one Brian, Steve.
Thanks to Blair for reminding me. I've put up a brief page on the
SPI-Scan project presentation
(http://dspace.org.nz/2012/04/14/sediment-profile-imaging-spi-scan-project/).
ELECTRONICS: As an update, Paul has gone gangbusters on the underwater
board and the design-review that we held the week before last seemed
really useful. We now have 10 pretty proto-boards produced and we'll be
assembling a few (SMDs are now fun rather than a mystery after last
week) and running them through their paces. I've ordered a Raspberry
Pi, but of course I'm waiting like everyone else.
CODING: Christ Baxter has produced an Arduino test daemon. Today we'll
be working out a plan-of-attack for the various coding blocks so that
Python, Java, and Arduino people can divide and conquer! Please come
along or bring your thoughts to the list!
MECHANICS: I've designed a new lens for the LED blisters after some
contemplation and experimentation with potting multiple materials
simultaneously. O-ring grooves are my friends. I'll be hacksawing and
turning down tubes and pipes for the frame before welding them next week.
Thanks to the four or five people who have contributed to the project so
far! I'm really excited that the project is moving forward and I think
D-Space will have something to crow about because the chatter already
makes it obvious that these open-hardware and software bits can be used
elsewhere. I've deposited $1000.00 into the D-space account to help us
along the way.
Cheers,
Brian :o)
From: Brian <stagecra...@gmail.com>
To: dunedin-m...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Saturday, 14 April 2012 12:30 PM
Subject: Re: [DSpace] Printer - Do we need stinkin' badges?
I've been throwing around this sort of idea for awhile - I think it
would be useful for have a section of the site dedicated to people, in
addition to something offline. Badges (or something similar) solve the
face to name problem well; the site should be able to solve the
interest/knowledge to name problem.
The one issue I have with badges is that my beard typically covers them.
I suspect I'm in the minority there.
- Blair
-Brian
Some sort of coded blinkie perhaps. Person A's blinky sends out, periodically, an interest set (some sort of message saying "I'm interested in X, Y and Z"), while Person B's blinky, who happens to be within the immediate vacinity, sends out "I'm interested in Y and W". Each, seeing that there is some commonality, blinks to indicate to the user that there is some overlap in common areas.... perhaps different colours, frequency etc. to show degree of overlap.
A coded message could take the form of a run-length encoded (possibly negated, if interest areas are expected to be densely populated) bitmap of topics (in chronological order so as to remove the versioning problem) as registered on a website somewhere. For example, Arduino might be the first registered topic, followed by C (programming), then Ada/SPARK followed by Linux, so if you were interested in Arduino, C programming and Linux, then the coded sequence, prior to any compression, would be 1101. If a topic Reprap were to appear, it would be appended to the end, so devices that understood version 1 would still be able to communicate with version 2 devices. You'd need a way to reprogram it (perhaps hold it up to a blinking square patch on a web-page that transmits the particular bit-sequence, depending on how it will communicate.
OMG, I think I just invented a geekier version of speed-dating... more efficient _and_ with less inter-personal interaction ;^)
Cheers,
Cameron
--
Cheers
Geoff Barkman
======================================
mmmm custard .....
Paul
Some sort of coded blinkie perhaps. Person A's blinky sends out, periodically, an interest set (some sort of message saying "I'm interested in X, Y and Z"), while Person B's blinky, who happens to be within the immediate vacinity, sends out "I'm interested in Y and W". Each, seeing that there is some commonality, blinks to indicate to the user that there is some overlap in common areas.... perhaps different colours, frequency etc. to show degree of overlap.
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