Archive for the ‘ITP’ Category
One for the archives
Ah memories. Click above for a video of me talking about some of my projects from the Winter 06 ITP show. Painting with perspective, WayMarkr, etc. It’ll always remind me of how special ITP is. To see projects from other ITP students, click here.
Mupe Writeup

A two day seminar on Mupe (pronounced Mup-e), an open source project from Nokia with the goal of circumvent all the present day headaches of mobile device development. If you have done any mobile development you know what i’m talking about: certificate and security issues, phone incompatibility, discrepancies between the emulator and the actual phone, specific phone resources issues, etc. The stuff that keeps you from doing the fun stuff, making your application and sharing it with as many people as possible. The promise of Mupe is that there is that there will be only one client that you install once and the Nokia signs and makes sure runs on several phone models (well probably only Nokia phone models). Then you code on the server and via your mobile device subscribe to application services that transfer the application logic and resources to the phone. The apps run in the Mupe sandbox. When you want to update the app, just update the server.

We got to play with it two days. It’s still very rough around the edges but has a lot of promise. I wanted to use it for thesis but that’s unlikely unless I have constant contact with the developers at Nokia. There are still nightly client/server builds. In summary, it’s defiantly a project to watch. It needs more documentation and a much larger user base to work out the bugs.

The seminar was run by Riku Suomel, a very knowledgeable and patient (very patient) member of the Nokia project team.
I am Saint Ignatius of the Church of Emacs

I’m at NYU’s Courant institute for math and science attending a talk by the g-dfather of free software, Richard Stallman. Years ago I used to volunteer for the FSF.
I’m going to try to document this in real time, we’ll see how this goes. The funniest thing so far is that the screen-server on the overhead projector (for the talk by Richard “emacs” Stallman) is a Windows XP logo. The hall isn’t as full as it was when Jimmy Wales spoke. Clearly he’s more of a rock star but we owe a lot to Stallman.
A lot of my friends used to type for him when we were in high school. He had pretty bad CTS then and needed to hire other people to do his typing.
Talk Starting:
Richard Stallman needs a Pepsi.
“The most important consideration for choosing software is ‘does it respect your freedom’. What does that mean? There are four essential freedoms. Freedom Zero (hah!) is to run the software as you wish.”
“Software should allow you to be upright members of a community in which you cooperate. The social dimensions of software becomes ethical. Not what the software is, but the social surrounding circumstances that are imposed on the user.”
“The developer of proprietary software is attacking the fabric of your community. Since you cannot copy software you cannot help others in your community. ”
“The most essential resource of a society is a psychosocial resource, it’s the spirit of goodwill. If you can raise the value of this resource a little bit, you can have profound implications on society. Proprietary software makers are poisioning this society.”
(on Piracy) Helping your neighbor != Attacking Ships
“How much fear is it going to take to make you not help your neighbor.”
Stallman also just said that in Germany and Argentina he has heard that people are threatened with rape for pirating software.
This is a very big picture, preachy talk. We’re supposed to be the foot soldiers and he’s the visionary. “To live in freedom, we must only use free software.”
“When a program says, I don’t want to copy this music for you, I don’t want to print this file for you, because I don’t like you.” <– Stallman’s take on DRM.
“A non free program can never be trusted. Just-trust-me software. Does a given developer deserve this kind of trust?”
“The freedom to contribute lets us built upon each other’s work and decide together where we want our software to go.”
GNU origin story. Stallman came to the conclusion that he wanted to write free software in 1983. “The word ‘gnu’ is the funniest word in the english language. It’s also very funny because the G is silent.” They tried to build a MACH micro-kernel but failed. Luckily in 1991 Linux came along. Legally, a program is a literary work and so it is covered by copyright law. The GNU GPL works around that copyright law.” The difference between the GPL and other free software licenses is ‘copy left’. The X windows systems allows you to release modified versions that aren’t free. Copy left doesn’t allow for that. Every copy of the program comes with the freedom. The GPL makes the four freedoms inalienable rights.
“Linus does not agree with the FSF tenants, he considers himself apolitical.”
“To finish I will now present my other identity.”
He then proceeds to pun on a robe and a halo.
“I am Saint Ignatius of the Church of Emacs.”
ITP Course Listings

Somehow Alice and I have ended up on the course catalog page for ITP. Watch us fuel the dynamism between technology and creativity!
Wikifuture

I went to see Jimmy Wales, of Wikipedia fame, speak today at a talk sponsored by Free Culture NYC. It was a packed house. I tried to take some ZoneTag photos but my fancy new SLVR isn’t that nice. Jimmy skipped most of his talk about Wikipedia (a majority of those attending had edited documents in Wikipedia and were fairly knowledgeable) and went ahead to talking about his new project, a search engine sponsored by the Wikia foundation. It turns out the Wikia foundation has a wealth of specialized content. Where Wikipedia only has 320 articles about the Muppets (Jim Henson, Big Bird, etc.), Wikia has over 3,000! There is general knowledge appropriate for an encyclopedia and then there’s the specific knowledge that is more appropriate for Wikia.
Wikia aims to build an open search. Built on open source tools, open source algorithms to bring trust and openness to search. Google and the rest keep their rule sets hidden away to protect against spammers but that’s just another version of security by obscurity. As Jimmy sees it, the blackhat SEOs have hundreds of thousands to spend on optimization while the little guy is dropped from the rankings. With open algorithms everyone will have a shot.
There are a lot of unanswered questions here, but it is definitely an exiting experiment. One that doesn’t protect users from themselves but treats them with trust, respect and gives them the benefit of the doubt. Wikia sees this open source search as a service for those that cannot compete with Google. Instead, third parties can syndicate the search and compete over user interface, branding and added services.
I also got a sneak peak at the OLPC!






