A part of me wants to grok up pretty equations again, so I’ve downloaded the latest TexLive for \LaTeX2! Interestingly, TUG supports pirate bay (albeit as a torrent lister). Viva!
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» SLRegAPI
Today I got bored and whipped up a managed solution to RegAPI. I have a fetish with registering domains for my weekend projects, so as you’ve guessed, I snagged SLRegAPI.com It’s just a simple system that automates the whole RegAPI setup so that even designers who can’t code can have a managed backend (served by me) to post to. Trivial stuff.
Posted on Sunday, February 3, 2008 @ 01:08 am in API, Projects
Tagged with: Tags: regAPI, secondlife
(FW is a programmer. The nanoimpossibility is due to FW. See here for more stuff from earlier.) To facilitate a variety of possible shapes and sizes, another implementation could feature a latex ’skin’, with internal balloons filled with oxygen, that create a replica of the person’s shape. Limbs could be facilitated with telescoping cylinders and hydraulics that extend or shrink to produce the proper length in the extremeties. RGB projectors surrounding the robot would project the face and proper skin tones, and the appearance of clothes. An extreme implementation, leveraging not-yet-developed but previously conceived technology, would be to use many small nano-scale robots to combine together into one larger one. The nano-scale robots would have the ability to alter their external coloring and thus each would appear to be the ‘pixels’ of the person. This methodology, demonstrated in true Hollywood style in the motion picture ‘Virtuosity’, would represent a significant undertaking, but is not necessarily unlikely as technology and our understanding progress. The booth looks significantly different now: FW and I finally finished setting up my SL version of a fuzzy logic viz exhibit:
The human eye takes on gestalt views of a scene to identify its people from the background environment. Now, what if a robot were to do the seeing? Traditional computing would have “line by line” scanning for processing, which means that machine will always lose to man. “Fuzzy logic” algorithms attempt to emulate the human perception.
iVizClone is the Second Life implementation of a possible real life exhibit of a dynamic real time “fuzzy logic” people visual-cloning robot. Robot sees. Robot becomes. The snapshot below features the first guy who dropped by our exhibit. (Not FW btw - he passed out! :-O) |
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