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Cause Caller is an interactive VoIP application that helps activists organize virtual phone banks. Anyone can use Cause Caller to create a cause and share it with their friends.
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Building a small portable multitouch pad Have fun and make a MTmini! This uses Front Diffused Illumination, with normal ambient light (infrared not required or needed) and a normal off-the-shelf webcam (IR filter can still be in place). So hot.
All posts by MattK
links for 2008-05-01
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Point it at a youtube url and get back an mp3.
convert your files up to 100 Mb !FLV to MP3 Converter is 100% free and you don’t need to install additional software.
This converter is great to convert videos to songs in a high quality
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columbia university and rutgers
links for 2008-04-30
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* Collects metrics in a fast, single pass through source files.
* Measures metrics for source code written in C++, C, C#, VB.NET, Java, Delphi, Visual Basic (VB6) or HTML.
* Includes method and function level metrics for C++, C, C#, VB.NET,
links for 2008-04-25
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mobile app for scanning qr codes
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put in txt, phone numbers, etc, get qrcode image. Could you have one small enough and put it on your business card?
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mind go slurrrrrrrr
links for 2008-04-18
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take a sentence, pick tokens in it and get back skeleton regex code in perl, php, python, js, java, coldfusion, c/c++, ruby, vb, c#, etc
Very hot because you use them so infrequently
Lost: explained
My buddy Nate pointed me to this convincing explanation of the events on the tv series Lost.
Installing two firefox extensions at once
When I was working on AddArt for Steve at Eyebeam I figured out how to install two firefox extensions at once using a multiple install bundle xpi. Useful if you have an extension that is dependent on another extension.
links for 2008-04-10
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A short explanation about how to create an .xpi file that installs two extensions. Includes a sample install.rdf file
links for 2008-04-09
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Never have I expected so little and been given so much.
What I read in March
March was full of some really high quality reading. If only every month brought such riches.
- Two stories from Ted Chiang, both via boingboing:
- The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate, a lovely time travel fable in an ancient arabic setting
- 72 Letters – A loopy mix of golem’s, DNA, golempunk and self reference. The ending is lovely.
- Glory – Greg Egan. Greg Egan always brings stunningly original ideas into his work and the climax is always for huge stakes. He does not disappoint here.
- The Things They Carried – Tim O’Brien. This powerful collection of Vietnam War stories was a random gift from Sally Nelson, but it was a sock in the gut. Each story has the quality of a carefully composed poem and individually worthwhile and cohesive. The kind of story you have to take a breather after. The collection as a whole is more than the sum of the stories as the characters, events and themes reference each other and wind back on themselves.
- Superman: Red Son. It’s a great comic book superficially about superman landing in the U.S.S.R instead of landing in Kansas. It’s really about free will and political choice. The execution here is much better than the summary of the gimmick.
- The Invention of Hugo Cabret. What a wonder this is. A beautiful combination of full rich sketches, text, and film stills. It’s a children’s book, but so unusual and exquisite that it kept me spellbound.
- I am a Strange Loop – Douglas Hofstadter. I found it convincing and persuasive. Gave me a fuller understanding of Godel’s theorem, a way to apply it to more problems, and an understanding of how consciousness can be an illusion that believes in itself. Fascinating and even more accessible than his first book, “Godel, Escher, Bach: and Eternal Golden Braid”.
If you were to read only one of these books, I’d hope it was “I am a Strange Loop”.  I think it is a powerful and touching explanation of what is going on in the meat between our ears. But I’d hope you’d read more than one. “The Things They Carried” and “The Invention of Hugo Cabret” are well worth your precious time.