Four short links: 27 October 2009
Digital Art Programming, DIY Construction Set, Open Source Pedant, Design Principles
by Nat Torkington | @gnat | comments: 1
- Field -- a development environment for "experimental code" and digital art. We think that, for many uses, Field is a better Processing than Processing. Includes Python and Java bridges, goal is to connect to as many different programming systems as possible. OS X only at the moment.
- Contraptor -- a DIY open source construction set for experimental personal fabrication, desktop manufacturing, prototyping and bootstrapping. (via Hacker News)
- After The Deadline -- open source contextual spelling and grammar checker. (via Hacker News)
- Design Principles to Choose the Right Ideas -- Often people ask me how we know which ideas to choose from all the hundreds of ideas we’ve generated during brainstorm sessions. Apart from our gut feelings and experience there’s a method that could help us decide: define design principles. Interesting for the different sets of design principles used by Google and Microsoft teams. (via egoodman on Delicious)
tags: art, design, diy, hardware, language, open source, processing, programming
| comments: 1
submit:
0 TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://blogs.oreilly.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-t.cgi/9937
Comments: 1
Post A Comment:
(please be patient, comments may take awhile to post)
STAY CONNECTED
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing Conference, February 22 - 24, 2010, New York, NY
Where 2.0 Conference, March 30 - April 1, 2010, San Jose, CA
O'Reilly MySQL Conference & Expo, April 12 - 15, 2010, Santa Clara, CA
Web 2.0 Expo, May 3 - 6, 2010, San Francisco, CA
Gov 2.0 Expo, May 25 - 27, 2010, Washington, DC
$249.00Twitter and the Micro-Messaging Revolution, OReilly Radar Report
RECENT COMMENTS
- Colin Kuskie on Four short links: 27 October 2009: I was curious about Aft...


Colin Kuskie [2009-10-27 10:49 AM]
I was curious about After the Deadline, and whether it would make a good plugin for WebGUI, so I went over to their site and tried a demo. It found misspelled words fine, but choked on something easy like "It is never two late two learn something gnu."
It knew that gnu was wrong, but didn't mention anything about two/to.