Entries Tagged as 'Programs'

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Visualizing Natural Language Processing Data and Extracting Conceptual Relationships

This is the final of three posts wrapping up my experiences with Google Summer of Code 2008 and the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence.
In this post, I will show how to visualize NLP parsed data using Wikipedia as an example.
As I mentioned in the previous post, the RelEx Crawler can output a HyperGraphDB.
To view the […]

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Linkovbot: A Natural Language Processing IRC Bot

This is the first of three posts wrapping up my experiences with Google Summer of Code 2008 and the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence.
Although it had nothing to do with my main project proposal, Linkovbot does use the same NLP software and I did write it to give myself a break from reading too much […]

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

Going to HOPE

I’m going to the HOPE conference in NYC tomorrow through Sunday. If anybody is going and wants to meet up, drop me a comment or an email and we’ll sort something out!

I’m tentatively scheduled to give a demo of the Anomos protocol in the General Demo Area on the mezzanine at 1300 on Sunday, you […]

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

Soousgle: Is Google Broadcasting Your Personal Information?

As Google is handing over your sensitive personal information to Viacom, I was reminded by some strange behavior I noticed in Google’s caching system a while back, that I have decided to investigate further.
This code doesn’t do anything exciting, but give it some time to let Google cache it and let another monitoring program I’ve […]

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

Anomos: Anonymous and Encrypted BitTorrent

John has just done a hell of a write-up of the Anomos protocol we came up with last summer, complete with pretty pictures of fancy graphs. This is just a teaser for before we drop the real-deal, of course, but at least we can let the protocol be publicly audited and publicized. FTA:
Anomos is a […]

Friday, February 15th, 2008

Linking is Not a Crime!: More on Jukebox

I sent an email to Sam Bayard of the Citizen Media Law Project telling him about Paul’s RIAA woes. I asked him if linking was a crime and his verdict was no. Of course, this is still just one man’s opinion, but he is a very well informed man.
I’m assuming he’s not going to mind […]

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

RIAA sends DMCA takenown notice to developer of the Jukebox Facebook application

My friend and housemate Paul Sawaya is the author one of the better Facebook applications, Jukebox, which lets users add an MP3 player to their profiles with a nice user interface (and thankfully no autoplay). It’s a nice, quick way to recommend and play music for your friends, and it has ~30,000 users.
Yesterday, Paul received […]

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

dX

..Jesus, I’m such a nerd. We started playing DnD and didn’t have any dice, so I wrote the dX Online Dice Roller. That’s pretty much all I’m gonna say about it.
So apparently Norway is awesome for a new reason besides fjords and black metal! The Liberal Party there is now advocating legal filesharing for non-commerical […]

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

RIAA Sorter

The Recording Industry Association of America likes to sue college kids and old ladies and little kids who share music files over P2P networks. RIAA Sorter is a simple program written in Python which will sort a directory of music into RIAA and Non-RIAA folders. Then, you can feel safe about sharing your Non-RIAA music […]