So my resolve to keep blogging regularly was broken, it would seem, by the sad realities of the latter part of the semester. A brief update list, before I get on with the story:
So in addition to playing with the little green laptop (for those who are curious, my X is light green and my O is light blue; each can come in one of twenty colors, the idea being to provide uniqueness across groups <= 400 students), I've also joined the global party of G1G1 donors-- we've all joined the same server, so we can share applications, chat, play TamTam, or whatever catches our fancy together. This makes the whole project more fun-- and while I was demoing the laptop this morning, I was able to actually show other people writing in a guestbook I shared with the "neighborhood"-- and all of us could simultaneously edit the same document (with different cursors, each in our OLPC colors). Neat stuff!
Anyway, this post has dragged on quite long enough-- but stay tuned for more musings, XO things, or general rants in the time ahead. I really will try to post *somewhat* more regularly as time goes on.
Finally, a new segment: "Entropy." Otherwise said, a quick highlights reel of my HipsterPDA:
- With a team, I did my Network Security project-- "Security Through Virtualization." The basic premise was to make a "secure" virtual machine through placing an antivirus scanner on another machine, then scanning changed files on the first continuously-- then, upon finding malware, rolling back the VM to a checkpoint. It turned out to be reasonably easy (well, for a term project; the professor said it could be done in a weekend, we spent more like a week on it), and so a good time was had by all.
- Somewhere in the middle of the various products, JHUMagic got its constitution finalized (we're an official student group now, yay!), and held its last tournament of the semester.
- I proctored, then worked (with all my CAs) to grade the Java final-- always interesting, or at least, always somewhat fun to see what students *actually* learned at the end of the semester (besides to hate me and/or Java :-) ).
- On my own, I did my final project for Embedded Sensor Networks-- a continuation and extension of the work I was doing for HiNRG. My task was to implement sensor network testbed control software-- which I had (previously) chosen to do in Rails. This worked out quite well-- Rails is designed for web applications, of course (which this was), and so the primary challenge turned out to be to write the middle layer (Rails being the top and MySQL and the motes being the bottom layer)-- which actually translated commands into action. It's research code, so I can't post it here (right now), but if someone wants to see it (especially if they know something about sensor networks, but even if they're just curious), I can certainly let you take a look.
- With my research team (the non-HiRNG one-- Shannon's Biomedical Engineering one), I went to visit Northrop Grumman. Fun people, if that's your area of interest; certainly they're doing interesting work. We got to learn about their research in the area of biodetection; naturally, what they told us was somewhat restricted, but it's not too hard to get some sort of idea.
- Internship-Related Tasks: 9
- Outstanding Tasks: 15
- Notables:
- OpenOffice.org Issue 5948 (For my father, who has been complaining about this one feature since I moved him away from The Evil Empire; only hard part is that I'm currently 2200 miles away from my dev location)
- Decide about moving my PDA to its new home (one of those neat Levenger thingies)
- Get videos working on my OLPC
- Notables:







