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This video demonstrates some results of scientific research in the field of AI and Music being carried out at the Institute of Computational Perception at Johannes Kepler University Linz (Austria). Based on the latest advances in machine learning, our computers learn to “listen to” and “understand” music, recognizing beat and rhythm, instantly identifying music pieces from a few played notes, following pianists and whole orchestras live in the concert hall, and learning to read music directly from images. Demos are shown of autonomous drum robots and other kinds of musical companions that turn music pages for pianists, provide synchronized scores to concert audiences, and accompany soloists. In a final video, we use a MIDI theremin to control expressive aspects of a piano performance in real time.
Credit: Jürgen Grünwald
Dewailly Cloister Roof - Amiens -France
HDA : Architect
Client : Ville d’Amiens
Architect: H²O& HDA
Date : 2007
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
HackNY Student Hackathon, April 9-10, 2011
Photo by Andy Kropa; AndyKropa.com
The Spring 2011 Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from nearly 50 universities in the U.S. and Canada to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.
Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.
On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.
hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.
For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY
This video demonstrates some results of scientific research in the field of AI and Music being carried out at the Institute of Computational Perception at Johannes Kepler University Linz (Austria). Based on the latest advances in machine learning, our computers learn to “listen to” and “understand” music, recognizing beat and rhythm, instantly identifying music pieces from a few played notes, following pianists and whole orchestras live in the concert hall, and learning to read music directly from images. Demos are shown of autonomous drum robots and other kinds of musical companions that turn music pages for pianists, provide synchronized scores to concert audiences, and accompany soloists. In a final video, we use a MIDI theremin to control expressive aspects of a piano performance in real time.
CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking
Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009
Haverford, PA
June 29 - July 3, 2009
This photo is from June 30, 2009.
The Magic of Computing (PPT)
by Dr. Tom Way, Villanova University
CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association
NECC National Conference
sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)
The Vanguard of Computation
This collection of portraits presents the people who are defining the limits and reach of computation
Andrew Herbert is the MD of Microsoft Research. He is pictured here removing the hard edges of technology.
"I see the potential for multi-core computing being the ability to take the hard edges off technology. In my future technology will be less visible, more human and simply make our lives easier." Andrew Herbert
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Centre at Renault F1 under construction
16 December 2007
for further information see:
www.formula1news.net/ing-renault-computational-fluid-dyna...
www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/12/01/319584/boeing-ph...
The Vanguard of Computation
This collection of portraits presents the people who are defining the limits and reach of computation
This is a group portrait of the people who built or used the worlds first computer, the EDSAC. The portrait is taken in front of an etching of the first EDSAC program.
Author: Paula Fernandes
Date: April 2008
Description: Exploring the three-dimensionality of the geometric models allows an acute and multi-perspective interiorization of the structure’s anatomy. The assembled view of the C5-C6 vertebra provides a global appreciation of the structure and underlying complexity. On the other hand, the exploded view reveals each anatomical piece individually and a sense of how they relate to each other.
Source: Ribeiro, N. S., Fernandes, P. C., Lopes, D. S., Folgado, J. O., Fernandes, P. R., 3-D Solid and Finite Element Modeling of Biomechanical Structures - A Software Pipeline, In: Proceedings of the 7th EUROMECH Solid Mechanics Conference, Portugal, 2009
Image and caption provided by: Paula Fernandes, IDMEC/IST-TU Lisbon
CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking
Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009
Haverford, PA
June 29 - July 3, 2009
This photo is from July 3, 2009 with:
by Dr. John Dougherty, Haverford College, Haverford, PA
CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association
NECC National Conference
sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)
On December 30, Ambassador Heidt and Minister of Education Hang Chuon Naron were on hand for a lecture at RUPP by world-famous scientist and entrepreneur Dr. Stephen Wolfram entitled “The Future of Computation and Knowledge.”
Dr. Wolfram is the founder and CEO of software company Wolfram Research, based in the United States, and the creator of the Wolfram Language, which powers the free “answer engine” Wolfram Alpha. The talk was organized by the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports; the U.S. Embassy; the Cambodia Science & Engineering Festival; and the Cambodian Mathematical Society.
[U.S. Embassy photo by Un Yarat]
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
Incheon International Airport T2 - South Korea
HDA : Design of roof structures and departure level envelope
Client : Incheon international airport corporation ( IIAC)
Architect : Heerim Architect & Planners, Mooyoung Architect & Consulting Architect Gensler
Date : 2011 - 2018
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
Computational Information Design
The ability to collect and store data continues to increase, but our ability to understand it remains unchanged. Data visualization makes use of our evolutionary proclivity for decoding visual images and employs this ability as a high-bandwidth means of getting data into our heads. In this talk, I'll present work I've developed ranging from illustrations of data for magazines and journals to software tools used by geneticists to interactive applications for Fortune 10 companies.
Keywords: Design, Visualization, InformationDesign, Processing, Java, VisualWeb, JavaScript
Target Audience: Anyone interested in understanding the mess of data around us.
Speaker Information
Ben Fry
Author of "Visualizing Data" and "Processing"
Expert in Interactive Media and Visualization, Principal of Fathom, Design and Software Consultancy
Ben Fry runs a design and software consultancy based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Software Passion: Creating ways to see data, and teaching others to do the same.
Website: benfry.com
Twitter: @ben_fry
Books:
- Getting Started with Processing
Software: processing.org/
The YOW! 2010 Australia Software Developer Conference is a unique opportunity for you to listen to and talk with international software experts in a relaxed setting.
Here's why you should want to attend:
* concise, technically-rich talks and workshops delivered
without the usual vendor-hype and marketing spin
* broad exposure to the latests tools and technologies,
processes and practices in the software industry
* "invitation only" speakers selected by an independent
international program committee from a network
of over 400 authors and experts
* a relaxed conference setting where you get the rare opportunity
to meet and talk with world-reknowned speakers face-to-face
* an intimate workshop setting where you are able
to benefit from an in-depth learning experience
* a truly unique opportunity to make contacts and network
with other talented Australian software professionals
* you'll be supporting a great charity. Ten dollars from every registration will be donated to the Endeavour Foundation.
website: YOW! 2010 Melbourne
venue: Jasper Hotel, Melbourne
At PNNL, the Biological Sciences Facility and Computational Sciences Facility were dedicated in the Fall of 2009.
The new facilities will enable discoveries in biological, computational and subsurface sciences and developments in bioenergy, carbon sequestration and homeland security.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
Taïkoo Hui - Tianhe, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
HDA : Specialist Design consultants
Client : Swire Properties Inc.
Architect: Arquitectonica
Date : 2005 - 2010
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing
CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking
Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009
Haverford, PA
June 29 - July 3, 2009
This photo is from June 29, 2009 with:
by Dr. Tom Cortina, CMU
CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association
NECC National Conference
sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)
In recent decades, developments in software and hardware technologies have created dramatic shifts in design, manufacturing and research. Software technologies have facilitated automated process and new solutions for complex problems. Computation has also become a platform for creativity through generative art and design. New hardware platforms and digital fabrication technologies have similarly transformed manufacturing, offering more efficient production and mass customization. Such advances have helped catalyzed the maker-movement, democratizing design and maker culture. This influx of new capabilities to design, compute and fabricate like never before, has sparked a renewed interest in material performance.
We are now witnessing significant advances in active matter, 3D/4D Printing, materials science, synthetic biology, DNA nanotechnology and soft robotics, which have led to the convergence of software, hardware and material technologies and the growing field of programmable materials.
This conference was about the emerging field of active matter and programmable materials that bridges the worlds of art, science, engineering and design, demonstrating new perspectives for computation, transformation and dynamic material applications.
If over the past few decades we have experienced a software revolution, and more recently, a hardware revolution, this conference aims to discuss the premises, challenges and innovations brought by today’s materials revolution. We can now sense, compute, and actuate with materials alone, just as we could with software and hardware platforms previously. How does this shift influence materials research, and how does it shape the future of design, arts, and industrial applications? What tools and design processes do we need to advance, augment and invent new materials today? What are the key roles that industry, government, academic and public institutions can play in catalyzing the field of programmable materials?
This two-day conference consisted of a range of talks and lively discussion from leading researchers in materials science, art & design, synthetic biology and soft-robotics along with leaders from government, public institutions and industry.
Learn more at activemattersummit.com
All photos ©L. Barry Hetherington
lbarryhetherington.com/
Please ask before use
A gift of $34 million from Dr. Dwight Diercks ’90 and his wife Dian, the MSOE Dwight and Dian Diercks Computational Science Hall will provide research and learning opportunities in artificial intelligence (AI), deep learning, cyber security, robotics, cloud computing, and other technologies essential to what is called the "fourth industrial revolution." The facility will feature a data center with an NVIDIA GPU-powered AI supercomputer.
CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking
Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009
Haverford, PA
June 29 - July 3, 2009
This photo is from July 3, 2009 with:
by Dr. John Dougherty, Haverford College, Haverford, PA
CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association
NECC National Conference
sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)
La Roche Sur Yon Railway Footbridge - France
HDA : Co-Architect and engineer
Client : City of the LA ROCHE-SUR-YON
Architect : HDA
Date : 2006 - 2011
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/