View allAll Photos Tagged GitHub
I hooked GitHub's stoplight up to their build system via Arduino, some relays, and an ethernet shield. Read about the process here:
www.urbanhonking.com/ideasfordozens/2010/05/the_github_st...
'Daid' (github.com/daid) explaining the finer points of Skeinforge vs Cura (?)...
The KamerMaker (RoomBuilder), capable of 3D printing large architectural objects with an epic 2x2x3.5m build area!
Launch party for kamermaker.com, a project by DUS Architects (dusarchitects.com), at Tolhuistuin, Amsterdam.
I've been hanging out for a Ninefold sticker since I joined the company. And now we have them.
Come get some!
See my previous update for what all the others are and where I got them.
I hooked GitHub's stoplight up to their build system via Arduino, some relays, and an ethernet shield. Read about the process here:
www.urbanhonking.com/ideasfordozens/2010/05/the_github_st...
Free photos. Set 21.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
Free photos. Set 12.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
Free photos. Set 30.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
'Daid' (github.com/daid) follows Joris up into the control tower of the KamerMaker.
The KamerMaker (RoomBuilder), capable of 3D printing large architectural objects with an epic 2x2x3.5m build area!
Launch party for kamermaker.com, a project by DUS Architects (dusarchitects.com), at Tolhuistuin, Amsterdam.
Created with: github.com/linusmossberg/button-mosaic
This image is made up of 26 832 buttons.
The original creative commons images of buttons were taken by:
Andy M Johnson, Arlene Janner, Bernard Spragg, laurabillings, Mark Morgan Trinidad B, Presley*, Silvia Siri, mag3737, Dean Hochman, Littlelixie, MyTangerineDreams, Salvagenation, scrappy annie, ShellyS, Vintage Sailor, vaula, welshkaren, wuestenigel
github.com/iancanada/DocumentDownload
UcPure MkIII is a pure ultracapacitor power supply. It makes use of the 3000F or higher c apacitance
ultracapacitor pack to achieve an ultimate power supply performance. Because it is a pure passive
power supply, there will be no feedback a nd no active components involved when it’s turned on. At the
pure output m ode, only the pre charged ultra capacitor pa ck will be applied to the load It’s also capable
of delivering up to 1000A dynamic current with less than 0.5 8 mOhm internal ESR ( continuous output
mode, decided by the 30 00F ultracapacitor s pack). It could be so far the best low noise and ultra high
dynamic power supply in the real world. Sound quality of sensitive audio applications such as low jitter
clock oscillators, DACs, FIFOs and m any other circuits will be benefit e d from th is UcPure MkIII power
supply. UcPure MkIII can be setup for 3.3V, 5V(default) and 15V configurations.
UcPure MkIII equipped with a SYNC charging function to
be able to re charge the ultracapacitors during
music stops.
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Photo © by Gerlinde de Geus, courtesy Cinekid Festival.
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2004; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
ZoomCharts is offering data visualization tools to support speakers at the Great Indian Developer Summit (GIDS), taking place April 21st through 24th at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Bangalore, C V Raman Ave, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560012, India.
Check out what you can do with ZoomCharts charts and graphs at zoomcharts.com
ZoomCharts is a leading data visualization provider, offering the worldâs most interactive data visualization software. All charts and graphs are completely interactive, support big data sets, work on all modern devices including touch screens, and perform at incredibly fast speeds. Be among the growing number of professionals discovering the exciting potential that ZoomCharts has in improving the efficiency of data analysis and presentation.
GIDS is the largest independent summit for software developers in India, and is bigger than ever this year, with over 30,000 attendees. It provides 4 days of enlightening discussion in tracks such as Cloud, Mobile, Java, and Data and Analytics. Learn about developer tools, languages and frameworks, HTML5, responsive web design, UI/UX, JavaScript, IOS, Android, GitHub, Stack Overflow, analyzing data, data visualization, and so much more.
This yearâs event includes a vast array of expert speakers. Venkat Subramaniam, founder of Agile Developer, is a returning speaker who holds a record for the most appearances and talks held at GIDS. He is a frequently invited guest at many other international software conferences as well, and is highly regarded in the Indian software development world.
Scott Davis, who has written extensively about Groovy and Grails as the future of Java development, is the co-founder of the Groovy/Grails Experience conference and speaks regularly at international tech conferences in addition to GIDS, such as No Fluff Just Stuff, JavaOne, OSCON, and QCON.
Josh Long, the Spring developer advocate at Pivotal, has great interest in coding and coffee, and is knowledgeable about subjects such as cloud computing, big data, and mobile.
Raju Gandhi is a Java, Ruby, and Clojure developer who writes software in a variety of industries, including education, finance, construction, and manufacturing. With his great expertise, he has been an invited speaker at other conferences such as No Fluff Just Stuff and ÃberConf.
Jeff Scott Brown, a Senior Software Engineer with Pivotal, has expertise in web development with Groovy & Grails, Java, and agile development.
Andres Almiray is a Java and Groovy developer with years of experience in software design and development. A supporter of open source, he has participated in projects such as Groovy, Griffon, JMatter, and DbUnit.
Chris Richardson is a developer and architect with a computer science degree from the University of Cambridge and over two decades of experience. He is the author of POJOs in Action, and the founder of the original CloudFoundry.com.
These are just some of the expert voices that will be heard over the course of the four day summit. A number of notable companies have recognized GIDS as a fantastic educational event as well, and have taken the opportunity to support it. This year, some major sponsors include HP, Microsoft, Accenture, Amazon, Oracle, MySQL, and Intel.
Check out ZoomCharts products:
Network Chart
Big network exploration
Explore linked data sets. Highlight relevant data with dynamic filters and visual styles. Incremental data loading. Exploration with focus nodes.
Time Chart
Time navigation and exploration tool
Browse activity logs, select time ranges. Multiple data series and value axes. Switch between time units.
Pie Chart
Amazingly intuitive hierarchical data exploration
Get quick overview of your data and drill down when necessary. All in a single easy to use chart.
Facet Chart
Scrollable bar chart with drill-down
Compare values side by side and provide easy access to the long tail.
ZoomCharts
The worldâs most interactive data visualization software
#zoomcharts #interactive #data #visualization #charts #graphs #bigdata #dataviz #GIDS #India #Indian #developer #summit #Bangalore #IISc #HP #Microsoft #Accenture #Amazon #Oracle #MySQL #Intel #Cloud #Mobile #Java #HTML5 #responsive #UI #UX #JavaScript #IOS #Android #GitHub #StackOverflow #VenkatSubramaniam #ScottDavis #JoshLong #Pivotal #RajuGandhi #JeffScottBrown #AndresAlmiray #ChrisRichardson
Some of these photos are at
www.demotix.com/news/2224293/restore-fourth-former-nsa-sp...
Mark Klein disclosed the NSA had a secret room taping into the Internet at AT&T San Francisco HQ and in other cities
www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/06/nsa-whistleblower-klein/
www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/homefront/interviews/kle...
www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/military/spy-factory.htm
More #NSA Snowden Bradley Manning wikileaks photos
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Yay for cross-platform code! Lic needed just a one line change to get it running on OSX.
There's still some OSX-specific issues to work out (different font sizing, odd rendering artifacts, atrocious performance), but I'll get an OSX app bundle posted soon.
Huge props to Allen Smith & his Bricksmith, for making it super easy for OSX users to get up & running with LDraw. Great sample model too! :)
***
Update October 2018 - New Web Lic is now available!
It takes a digital village: An empirical and analytical look at what grows strong communities across GitHub.com
Ben Balter (GitHub)
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
UNTITLED DIGITAL ART (AUGMENTED HAND SERIES)
By Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, and Kyle McDonald
Repository: github.com/CreativeInquiry/digital_art_2014
Contact: @golan or golan@flong.com
Commissioned by the Cinekid Festival, Amsterdam, October 2014, with support from the Mondriaan Fund for visual art. Developed at the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University with additional support from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Frank-Ratchye Fund for Art @ the Frontier. Concept and software development: Golan Levin, Chris Sugrue, Kyle McDonald. Software assistance: Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, Erica Lazrus. Conceived 2005; developed 2013-2014.
Special thanks to Paulien Dresscher, Theo Watson and Eyeo Festival for encouragement, and to Dan Wilcox, Bryce Summers, and Erica Lazrus for their help making this project possible. Thanks to Elliot Woods and Simon Sarginson for assistance with Leap/camera calibration, and to Adam Carlucci for his helpful tutorial on using the Accelerate Framework in openFrameworks. Additional thanks to Rick Barraza and Ben Lower of Microsoft; Christian Schaller and Hannes Hofmann of Metrilus GmbH; Dr. Roland Goecke of University of Canberra; and Doug Carmean and Chris Rojas of Intel.
Developed in openFrameworks (OF), a free, open-source toolkit for arts engineering. This project also uses a number of open-source addons for openFrameworks contributed by others: ofxPuppet by Zach Lieberman, based on Ryan Schmidt's implementation of As-Rigid-As-Possible Shape Manipulation by Igarashi, Moscovich & Hughes; ofxLeapMotion by Theo Watson, with assistance from Dan Wilcox; ofxCv, ofxLibdc, and ofxTiming by Kyle McDonald; ofxCvMin and ofxRay by Elliot Woods; and the ofxButterfly mesh subdivision addon by Bryce Summers.
Shoutouts from @golan @chrissugrue & @kcimc: @admsyn @bla_fasel @bwycz @cinekid @CMUSchoolofArt @creativeinquiry @danomatika @elliotwoods @eyeofestival @laurmccarthy @openframeworks @PESfilm @rickbarraza @SimonsMine @theowatson @zachlieberman
Free photos. Set 1.
Use it freely in personal and commercial projects.
CC-License
Photos: Anthony Clochard / wuipdesign.github.io
With the new clustering
code in Python it is easy to adapt the Tag Maps technique to other data and information.
This map is based on photos with tags and emojis from both Flickr (2007-2018) and Instagram (2010-2018).
There're about 2400 Flickr photos (from 300 users with 15,000 tags) and 10,000 Instagram photos (from 5000 users, with 50k tags and 6500 emojis) - not much for an area of this size.
The key to equal mapping of emojis and tags here was to process both sets of data separately and normalize the resulting weights to the same range. This way, emojis and tags have an equal chance to appear on the map.
I think it is quite interesting how both sets of information supplement each other.
Map tiles by Carto, under CC BY 3.0. Data by OpenStreetMap, under ODbL.