Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Japan Photos - Final Update

Hi all, it's once again been a long time since my last post. I finally got around to picking through all of the best of the photos I took earlier this year in Japan. The collections are divided by the different cities and surrounding regions I travelled to. Check them all out here.


Sunday, April 6, 2014

Japan photos

Hi all, apologies for the lack of updates. It's been a busy year for me. I graduated from University and went on holiday to Japan. I moved to Melbourne and began a new career at Deloitte. It's been pretty tough to settle down but I think I'm going steady for now.

That takes me to the topic at hand. I took over 2000 photos in my 3+ week trip in Japan and have been slowly going through them. Watch my Flickr account for updates. For now, I present the "best of" photos I took in Osaka and Kyoto.

Click here

Monday, July 15, 2013

Netherlands Trip 2013

KLIA Satellite BuildingKLIA Main TerminalAmsterdam Airport Schiphol StationDamstraatSint NicolaaskerkDe Wallen
Damstraat 2Royal Palace of AmsterdamMadame Tussaud's Wax MuseumA Bird Feeder (Nieuwe Kerk in the BG)On the way to Muiderslot Castle 1On the way to Muiderslot Castle 2
On the way to Muiderslot Castle 3On the way to Muiderslot Castle 4Muiderslot Castle 1Muiderslot Castle 2Muiderslot Castle 3Muiderslot Castle 4
Muiderslot Castle 5Muiderslot Castle 6Muiderslot Barrels 1Muiderslot Barrels 2Muiderslot Interior 1Muiderslot Interior 2

Netherlands Trip 2013, a set on Flickr.

I've uploaded photos of my Netherlands trip to Flickr. Check it out!

Sunday, June 30, 2013

My first European trip...to Amsterdam!

This Thursday, I'll be visiting Europe for the first time in my life. I am attending a conference at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam called GECCO 2013, or the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference. I will be presenting the academic paper that I have been working on for the past year. The paper is titled Fast and Effective Multi-Objective Optimisation of Wind Turbine Placement.

As you can imagine, my paper has to do with research into the real world applications of Evolutionary Computation. In this instance, genetic algorithms are used to arrange the layout of wind turbines inside a wind farm. My research involves fiddling with the mutation and crossover operators in order to get better results in multi-objective settings.

It was by chance that I was able to visit Amsterdam to attend the conference. The University of Adelaide offered the opportunity to me after my paper was accepted. So, thanks very much to my supervisors, team members and faculty for making this all happen. I won't forget the generosity of the School of Computer Science. Looking onwards, I hope I can enrich my knowledge in the field at the conference. Not only is it my first time to Europe, but it is also the first time I am attending a conference.

Look out for newly uploaded photos on my Flickr account. I am expecting to take as many photos as I can on my busy schedule! I might even update my Google+ if I have the chance.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Flickr

Yahoo relaunched Flickr today with a gigantic 1TB limit on uploaded files. I saw fit to create a Flickr account to publish my photos, as that's a hell of a lot more than Picasa's 5GB!

Check out my account here.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

HP 9000 Model 735/125

Hi folks,

Today I got a nice Unix box from a fellow who was looking to offload all his junk. It's a HP 9000 Model 735/125. It's a shame that there was no keyboard and mouse, but it came loaded OpenBSD 4.2.

I promptly upgraded the machine to OpenBSD 5.2 and it runs sweetly, if only through the serial console. I'll be on the lookout for HP-HIL adapters so that I can use the framebuffer.

For those that don't know, these machines were expensive high-end Unix workstations in the early 90s. This particular beast sports a 125 MHz PA-7150 CPU and 176MB of RAM. To put this in perspective, the average high end home machine at the time (1994) would have had 16MB of RAM. In terms of performance, these chips were second only to the most torridly clocked Alpha AXP 21064 CPUs. The PA-RISC chips of this era easily smashed the IBM POWER, SGI MIPS and Intel x86. Way to go HP!

Not sure what I'll do with it, but for now I'll just fiddle around with OpenBSD/hppa. Feels great to use a machine that cost $30,000+ at one point. They're simply built to a completely different standard...



Sunday, March 31, 2013

Blast to the past: Brøderbund's Living Books

As some of you may know, I always post retro things to my YouTube channel. A few years ago, I posted a few videos with demos of me playing some old interactive books from a defunct company known as Brøderbund. They had a whole product line called the Living Books series. These were amazing interactive, animated children's books.

These products were amazing in that they offered so much multimedia (animated graphics, sound effects and music) for the time. This was software that could really put your (early 90s) multimedia PC's or Mac's capabilities to good use. I used to have hours on end of good fun from these games since the in-game world was so responsive to your actions.

The fascinating thing I found about the videos I uploaded was how popular they were. My YouTube channel has over a million views, the bulk of which is supplied by views of the Living Books videos that I posted. Many people post comments to ask me to post more gameplay videos. I would, if I owned more Living Books, but even now I only posess Just Grandma and Me, Arthur's Teacher Trouble, The Tortoise and the Hare and Ruff's Bone. All of them are great titles that offer hours of enjoyment.

You might be thinking that these wonderful products are now lost in the mists of time. You would have been right about that until recently. A company named Wanderful, Inc. has revived many of the Living Books titles on mobile Apple devices. Pretty apt, since a lot of parents these days buy iPads for their kids. Check them out here.