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DATE | 2007-05-15 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [ruben@mrbrklyn.com: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] What is exciting today with
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A reprint since I had friends who missed this-- _________________________________________________________________
With the latest GNU software platforms quickly reaching a steady level of maturity, it seems that a lot of the excitment of the early years is waning. While there are new technologies making their way through Free Software, much of the new stuff is just rehashed versions of the older models. With the increasing complexity of applications and system, it seems things are getting further and further out of reach of the hobby hacker and novice.
That leaves an open question? What is the new and exciting stuff that GNU users can look forward to today. My feeling is thatnew user to Free Software is not acheving the romance that we all had in the early years. But even still we have a few new areas of development which I believe merit excitment. I'n a quick list of GNU technologies worthy of excitment I submit the following list for your review and thoughts.
Ruben's most exicting top 5 Free Software initiatives 2007:
1: Robotic Programming: http://linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2717739661.html What the world needs now, according to a Japanese research group, is a low-cost programmable robot.
To spur more development of robots at the hobbyist level, Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) is promoting a humanoid creature named HRP-2m Choromet. One problem with current robots, AIST says, is that they tend to be little more than remote-controlled devices. Another is that getting beyond that evolutionary stage tends to take a lot of cash. Choromet The robot Choromet. Credit: AIST
Choromet, which bears a striking resemblance to the Transformers character Optimus Prime, comes with programmable software that runs on Linux. It was developed by General Robotix, one of two start-ups working under AIST together with Pirkus Robotix and Dai Nippon Technical Research Institute. The controller, which is driven in real time by AIST's ArtLinux, was developed by Moving Eye, the other start-up in the group.
"This controller features some of the functions of the humanoid robot software platform OpenHRP, which has helped give the robot movements such as walking on two legs and getting up," AIST said in a statement.
The 14-inch-tall Choromet weighs about 3 pounds and uses inexpensive servo motors.
The combination of Linux and the servo motors, according to AIST, will help reduce the cost of creating robots for educational and research applications. The group did not disclose any specific pricing, however. A prototype of the robot first debuted in May at a Japanese mechanical-engineering symposium.
Interest is growing in making robot building more accessible to both academic researchers and the commercial market.
In June, Microsoft announced that it would be funding a new research lab at Carnegie Mellon University, a robotics hot spot. The company also launched Microsoft Robotics Studio, its first robotics software, and made the Windows-based development platform available for public preview.
Toy maker Lego has also been developing a programmable robot line called Mindstorms NXT, still in an open-source community-testing phase. The company has said it will release software, hardware and Bluetooth developer kits to the public in August.
http://www.linuxpcrobot.org/ http://ai-depot.com/Robotics/920.html http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/python/2001/03/21/pythonnews.html http://microcontrollershop.com/product_info.php?products_id=1405 inux Robotics: Programming Smarter Robots US$34.95 9780071444842 Linux Robotics: Programming Smarter Robots
In Linux Robotics: Programming Smarter Robots, author and programmer/robot enthusiast D. Jay Newman combines the most sophisticated parts of robotics and programming to fill a real gap in available information. Most robotics books today use microcontrollers as the brains of the robots. This approach is fine for smaller, less expensive projects, but has serious limitations. When attempting to build a robot with sophisticated movements, navigation abilities, vision, and picture-capturing abilities, it is better to use a single board computer (SBC) running Linux as the controller.
Linux Robotics gives you step-by-step directions for "Zeppo," a super-smart, single-board-powered robot that can be built by any hobbyist. You also get complete instructions for incorporating Linux single boards into your own unique robotic designs. No programming experience is required. This book includes access to all the downloadable programs you need, plus complete training in doing original programming.
Softcover, 350 pages Contents
* Chapter 1: Starting Out * Chapter 2: Electronics and Such * Chapter 3: Internal Communication: The Control Network * Chapter 4: Sensors * Chapter 5: Behavioral Programming * Chapter 6: Audio: Speaking and Listening * Chapter 7: Vision: Seeing the World * Chapter 8: Mapping and Planning: Where Is Here? How Do We Get There From Here? * Chapter 9: Artificial Neural Networks * Chapter 10: Working Without a Wire * Appendix A: ENerd Robotics Framework Code * Appendix B: Resources
http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4356841803.html
2: Home Media Centers that access all over the home
http://www.mythtv.org/ http://www.desktoplinux.com/articles/AT3446119016.html http://linuxmce.com/ LinuxMCE is a free, open source add-on to Ubuntu including a 10' UI, complete whole-house media solution with pvr + distributed media, and the most advanced smarthome solution available. It is stable, easy to use, and requires no knowledge of Linux and only basic computer skills. Features Version 1.0
Media & Entertainment • 3D alpha-blended GUI optimized for displaying on a TV and using a remote control • Media browser presenting all content on all devices in the home on a 3D rotating cube • Plug-and-play detection and aggregation of network storage and DMA's • Built-in NAS providing centralized backup and whole-house media server • "Follow Me" Media, each family member's media follows him/her through the house • Automatically controls all existing av devices, like TV's, Stereo's, etc.) • Many control options: mobile phone, webpad, pda, phone
Smart Home • Home Automation: Control lighting, climate, security, camera surveillance, and more • Communication: Phone system with auto-attendant, voice mail, call forwarding/routing for VOIP and POTS lines • Security: Uses your existing home alarm, surveillance cameras, lights, phones and tv's to notify you on your mobile phone of any security alerts with the option of reseting the alarm or broadcasting your voice in the house over the tv's
http://www.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/06/19/1843205 Freevo is like a window manager -- an interface controlled by a remote control or the keyboard -- that provides access to various media. It is written mostly in the Python programming language, which makes it hacking-friendly.
Everything you expect to find on a media center platform is present in Freevo; you can listen to music, view pictures, and watch TV and video. Freevo offers no internal player, but relies exclusively on external programs like MPlayer and Xine for playing media files and viewing TV. I use MPlayer for all media formats except DVD video playback, since MPlayer currently has no support for DVD menus. Xine fills that gap nicely.
http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/a_media_center_based_on_gnu_linux http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/9175 Use embedded Linux and open-source software to build a networked audio appliance.
Like many media buffs these days, I have a media center computer in my house. It is a small VIA M10000 Mini-ITX system in a Casetronic C158 case running Freevo on top of Gentoo Linux. It sits inside my media cabinet and serves music, video, photos and various other bits of information to my TV. The small media center gets all of its content from a much larger AMD64 Gentoo Linux server that resides in a closet near the back of the house. The two machines talk to each other over a wired network using NFS (Network File System). I will be the first to tell you that it is great to have all of my music, videos and photos in a digital format and easily accessible.
In the same spirit of my media center computer, I wanted to have a few small systems that could sit on a shelf or in a drawer that would serve music to different parts of the house. Many products on the market exist that will broadcast audio from a computer and many others will play the resulting stream. The problem with most of these, to me, is that only one stream is available. I wanted the ability to play different music in each room at the same time and control it with one device. A few newcomers to the market do exactly what I wanted -- namely the Sonos Digital Music System, which was reviewed in the March 2006 issue of Linux Journal. However, I wanted to tackle this one myself.
3: Telephoe elimination and supplimentation software Bayonne http://www.gnu.org/software/bayonne/faq.html http://www.voip-info.org/wiki-Open+Source+VOIP+Software http://www.internetnews.com/infra/article.php/3574246 http://www.asterisk.org/ http://www.bertolinux.com/voip/english/VoIP-HOWTO.html http://www.nseries.com/products/n800/index.html
4: Video and Music Production: http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/8589 http://lmms.sourceforge.net/ http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/feb04/articles/mirrorimage.htm
Mirror Image Studios Published in SOS February 2004 Printer-friendly version Printer-friendly version People : Industry/Music Biz
An established studio in the USA is planning to rely on software that can be freely downloaded from the Internet. Are they crazy, or do Linux-based recording applications offer a real alternative to the established Windows and Mac packages?
Daniel James
MirrorImageHeader.s Ron Parker (left) and Dana Bailey in the control room at Mirror Image Studios.
Minneapolis, Minnesota is about 400 miles north-west of Chicago. The young man who would become Bob Dylan came from around there, but probably the best known musical resident these days is Prince. Not far from the Great Lakes and the Canadian border, it gets pretty cold in winter. It's also home to a commercial recording studio which may not be as famous as Prince's Paisley Park complex, but is probably the first anywhere to depend on Linux-based software at every stage of the music production cycle.
Ron Parker started Mirror Image Recording Studios around 20 years ago with brothers Dana and Bill Bailey, after they moved to the city with the bands they were in at the time. Dana Bailey also worked with Prince and The New Power Generation as MIDI and keyboard technician on two world tours. Later, NPG vocalist Rosie Gaines partnered Dana as a songwriter, creating tunes including the speed garage anthem 'Closer Than Close'. As is all too often the case, selling hundreds of thousands of records around the world did not produce proportional financial returns for the artists involved — and years later, Dana and Rosie are still waiting to be paid the royalties on that particular record.
5: X11R6
just because....
Ruben
-- http://www.mrbrklyn.com - Interesting Stuff http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software
So many immigrant groups have swept through our town that Brooklyn, like Atlantis, reaches mythological proportions in the mind of the world - RI Safir 1998
http://fairuse.nylxs.com DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS - RI Safir 2002
"Yeah - I write Free Software...so SUE ME"
"The tremendous problem we face is that we are becoming sharecroppers to our own cultural heritage -- we need the ability to participate in our own society."
"> I'm an engineer. I choose the best tool for the job, politics be damned.< You must be a stupid engineer then, because politcs and technology have been attacted at the hip since the 1st dynasty in Ancient Egypt. I guess you missed that one."
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