Thursday, April 15, 2010
Tree sculpture in bedroom
I've barely had a chance to do any house projects because of work on Traitwise, but recently I did finish up the tree sculpture in my bedroom/bathroom. This is one of the first ideas I had for my house and one of the last to actually get implemented! This view is looking up from my bathroom toward the shared ceiling with my bedroom on the other side of the green wall.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Traitwise alpha general release
We've made a lot of progress on Traitwise our engine for permitting people to ask and answer seemingly random health-related questions. From this public Q&A we find correlations among all the participants and permit you to understand yourself in a larger context. We also hope that in the long term this gigantic dirty database of answers will reveal interesting things about human health. And, even through we've only barely begun to populate the database, already the correlation engine is turning up intriguing things. For example, some I've looked at today...
- Reporting that you "have trouble regulating your emotions" is strongly correlated to experiencing significant forgetfulness.
- Experiencing dry mouth is correlated to napping
- Being irritable is correlated to being clumsy
http://www.traitwise.com
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Traitwise alpha -- Call for participation
As many of my friends know, I've been working on a project for sometime that aims to develop a user-friendly interface for answering and creating health-related questions. We are excited to release the alpha version of http://www.traitwise.com and hope you'll help us by participating.
Traitwise is about giving us all a voice in our own health care. Not only can you answer questions, but you may develop questions of your own about any health related subject. We would very much appreciate it if you would create an account and then create questions,
especially about specific diseases or conditions based on your own experience -- after all, no one knows better about a condition than those who suffer from it.
The question creation process is very easy, and don't worry about making mistakes -- all questions go through a review process.
If you are interested in creating questions, you may review the question creation guidelines here, which may make the process easier for us:
http://communities.traitwise.com/mediawiki/index.php/Question_Creation_Guidelines
For those super-technical friends of mine, be sure to check out the "Analytics" page and see a prototype of how it is that our system finds interesting patterns. (Try "sleep" as an example).
Please note that as this is an alpha release and thus there are plenty of bugs to find (please report them on the "Feedback" page) and many features missing. The most important of the missing features is "results" -- that is returning back to you the interesting findings about your health. As it is now, the system mostly takes from you (your answers and questions) but gives back very little (the results). By answering questions, you are helping us to gather a sufficient amount of data that we may fully develop the results pages.
Thank you for all your help!
http://www.traitwise.com
Traitwise is about giving us all a voice in our own health care. Not only can you answer questions, but you may develop questions of your own about any health related subject. We would very much appreciate it if you would create an account and then create questions,
especially about specific diseases or conditions based on your own experience -- after all, no one knows better about a condition than those who suffer from it.
The question creation process is very easy, and don't worry about making mistakes -- all questions go through a review process.
If you are interested in creating questions, you may review the question creation guidelines here, which may make the process easier for us:
http://communities.traitwise.
For those super-technical friends of mine, be sure to check out the "Analytics" page and see a prototype of how it is that our system finds interesting patterns. (Try "sleep" as an example).
Please note that as this is an alpha release and thus there are plenty of bugs to find (please report them on the "Feedback" page) and many features missing. The most important of the missing features is "results" -- that is returning back to you the interesting findings about your health. As it is now, the system mostly takes from you (your answers and questions) but gives back very little (the results). By answering questions, you are helping us to gather a sufficient amount of data that we may fully develop the results pages.
Thank you for all your help!
http://www.traitwise.com
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Closet, bathroom, and bedroom
Bruce delivered the major pieces of my closet drawers and shelves today! Hooray, storage! We use the same CNC web-based box builder as before -- "Top Drawer Components" -- just love the results from them. Every box is dove-tailed, perfectly square, and already polyed at very reasonable prices. For the drawers I'll eventually put on drawer plates that will hide the slider hardware.
For some bathroom storage we ordered two different sizes of box and screwed them together for this nice effect. (There's several more bathroom fixtures yet to be installed.)
Meanwhile, last week we started on the "tree" element that spans out between then bathroom and the the bedroom. There's a lot more pieces to add to this, but all the heavy stuff is done.
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Fountain pumps
It's taken years to get around to, but the fountain by my back door finally pumps water. Still lots of details to clean up -- hiding the plumbing and finishing the brickwork, but progress nevertheless!
Meanwhile, I've commissioned a bas-relief sculpture of the nerd-martyrdom of Hypatia from my friend Holly Melear that will go on the top back along the wall.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Found art - child's game map
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Camera ethernet
One or the combination of drugs I'm on (buproprion and celexa) induce very vivid dreams. The other night I dreamed about allowing laptop computers, which now often have built-in cameras, to communicate with each other by flashing their screens at each other. If the 640x480 cameras ran at 30 fps at, say, 50% efficiency then you might be able to achieve 30*(640*480)/4*8/2 = 9 Mbits/sec which is about the bandwidth of first generation Ethernet. (Although realistically I'd be impressed if you got 1 Mbps.) Implementing this might be a fun student programming assignment.
(Yes, it's true, I have super nerdy dreams! What did you expect?)
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