Tag Archives: Geek Night

Reading Geek Night 14 follow-up

By

This Wednesday I presented at Reading Geek Night 14, on the subject of “Hacking Kinect”. I’d like to thank everyone for their nice and constructive comments following the presentation, I thoroughly enjoyed doing it and it is a topic on which I am very enthusiastic.

As a brief follow-up, the code that I demoed is from two sources. The original Kinect hack is now part of the OpenKinect project; you can fork their code and the simple testing app “glview” from their github. The algorithm I showed for tracking a pointing arm is also available on my own github. This has since been successfully hooked up to the robot arm I mentioned during the talk, for a very successful demo just 2 days after I did the presentation. If you have any questions about the code or have ideas for projects regarding this, I am always very open to them so please feel free to get in touch by some method through the Connect tab at the top of the page.

I would like to take this opportunity to note a few of my thoughts regarding the Reading Geek Night event. Jim announced on Tuesday that he has secured Copa for the next 12 months, so over 50 local geeks will continue to be able to meet and socialise monthly under the banner. I think it goes without saying that everyone who has ever attended is glad of Jim’s commitment, enthusiasm and continued organisation of the events. However, according to Jim, I have now managed to hit nearly 50% presentation rate for the Geek Night events ever held; while I am flattered that the community continues to sit through my ramblings, it is time that I hang my hat before everyone is sick of me. Therefore, I will not be presenting at Reading Geek Night for theĀ foreseeableĀ future (think at least 6-9 months from now); I will continue to be a great fan of the event, and will show up as often as my schedule permits, and I will promote the event to everybody I know who may be interested so it can continue its brilliant growth.

It should be noted, finally (I promise!), that Reading Geek Night cannot continue without speakers. Had I not stepped in 2 days before hand, we would have been entertained by only one (suitably excellent) presentation on Cyborgs the last evening. So as I have promised not to do this any more, it is time for others of the community to come forward and entertain, inform, and thoroughly geek out their peers. For me, my 6+ Geek Night presentations have strengthened my confidence, provided a friendly playground in which to work on my public speaking, and challenged me to get out of my comfort zone and hopefully improve as a result of that. So if you have something you think the usual crowd would be interested in, or something new for them entirely, please jump in and get involved. A presentation need only be 5 minutes long, and it is an extremely rewarding experience. If you would like to talk to me about presenting itself (not the content specifically) I have got some tips I have acquired over the last 14 months I would be more than happy to share, if you buy me the tea to keep me talking :-)

Until the next Geek Night.

IE 9 and HTML 5 – download examples and slides

By

Thanks to everyone who came to my Reading Geek Night presentation about IE 9 and HTML 5 last night!

It was a pleasure talking to you all, and hopefully you got something out of the evening.

All my slides on the night were powered by HTML 5, so I have zipped them up (minus the space shuttle launch video – it was HD so quite a big file) and they are now available to download below.

Hopefully catch up with you all at an event soon!

Zip

Download Slides

Tonight! I’m at Reading Geek Night

By

Tonight I will be presenting at the Reading Geek Night (#rdggeek on Twitter), on the subject of “IE 9 and the Future of the Web”.

Why not come along? It’s at 7.30 at Copa bar in central Reading (map), and is a great opportunity to meet and catch up with local geeks.

I’ll be talking about the latest Platform Preview of IE 9, and some very cool new technology that is in the works for all the major web browsers, in the shape of HTML 5.

Hope to see you there!

Reading Geek Night

Reading Geek Night