Archive for the 'Interesting' Category

3 months, 2 weeks ago

The most interesting thing at RSA wasn’t about security

Jeff Hawkins RSA 2008 Keynote AddressWhen one goes to a conference targeted at computer security professionals it stands to reason that one will hear a lot of keynote speeches about trends within the security industry and where it thinks it is going. At this years 2008 RSA Conference this trend held true with two notable exceptions. First was Al Gore’s keynote on global warming and technology, which the press covering the show was banned from attending. The second was a far more interesting keynote given that had wide ranging implications and very little to do directly with computer security. Jeff Hawkins, the founder of Palm and Handspring and now founder & CEO of his newest company Numenta, gave that keynote. Image: Jeff Hawkins gives his RSA 2008 keynote D. Spisak

In his talk, Hawkins went over problems that Artificial Intelligence (AI) researchers have struggled with, and through trials and tribulations, had grudgingly concluded were if not impossible to solve, extremely difficult at best. One of the problem domains Hawkins examined was visual processing. For example, if you were presented with a series of photos of dogs and cats and asked to classify the animal in each photo, you could do it easily, but a computer using traditional AI techniques would fail miserably.

Hawkins then took a quick tangent through the neural mapping of how monkeys see as a way to introduce the audience to the concept of hierarchical temporal memories. Think of a Hierarchical Temporal Memory (HTM) as a pyramid; at the lowest level you have the greatest number of neurons processing visual input in a very basic way and passing up the hierarchy a reduced set of information that encapsulates the input seen. The other key aspect of this system is the temporal aspect of input processing; we don’t just see what is happening in the present—we have a memory of what things looked like in the recent past as well, which helps us process the massive amount of visual data coming in every second. This process happens at each level: at each step the amount of information and speed of its flow is reduced. Crucially, information can pass bi-directionally between different levels of the hierarchy. It is this bidirectional communication that allows you to see a photo of a cat, recognize the shape, color, and other aspects passing them along to your brain, which then processes this information and recognize the photo as a cat.

Now, why is all of this important? With this enhanced understanding of how information is actually processed it’s possible to try and build an electronic model of an HTM. This is where Hawkins’ company, Numenta, comes into play, creating an electronic HTM development platform for Windows, Mac and Linux platforms called the Numenta Platform for Intelligent Computing or NuPIC. (You can download it here.) NuPIC has its own language and syntax, affording developers near-limitless flexibility to build HTM based applications. To help users new to this development platform see what is possible, Numenta has created a demonstration HTM application called Pictures. This HTM application takes in as input a set of photos scanned in at multiple angles and then builds up an ability to start recognizing these photos, even when the images are obscured with noise.

In Hawkins’ talk, he showed recognition results for the Pictures HTM application under different kinds of visual impairment (i.e., static noise, dynamic noise, etc) that were surprisingly good. As the amount of visual noise became denser and more complex the HTM’s accuracy did decline, but was still significantly useful. According to Hawkins, based on Numenta’s experience with creating and enhancing the Picture’s HTM application he predicts that the computer vision problem of asking a computer to ask if a picture is of a dog or a cat could be solved within the next two years. Hawkins also showed examples of photos the Pictures HTM recognized as certain types of objects, like cars or boats when the application had been trained with photos of those objects and then given a set of random photos to try and determine what they are. This demonstration of the power of HTMs is but scratching the surface of what is possible.

Hawkins is keen to caution that HTMs are not a cure-all solution to all kinds of AI/computer learning domain problems. HTMs assume your problem domain can be expressed as a spatial-temporal hierarchy. This is a technology that will have far-ranging implications once it starts to get into the hands of the truly imaginative and creative developers out there. While Hawkins technology currently doesn’t have immediate implications within the security realm, it is easy to see how one might apply the technology to age-old problems within the industry. Natural applications for an HTM could be processing log data from IDS and firewall systems, better face recognition systems, ability to identify dangerous objects in photos or videos.

These are just a few of the applications that this writer can think up. There are likely far more out there that I haven’t thought of that could be just as important or better. Year after year we hear about new security products and services from the industry aimed at businesses and solving their security challenges, but the process has become an incremental one. This was evident at this year’s RSA show. What is needed is something revolutionary, not evolutionary, to help the industry. Perhaps HTMs will turn out to be something these security companies will add to their arsenal and turn into useful tools and solutions that we need.

(Originally posted at TechRevu)

3 months, 3 weeks ago

A Full-Size Keyboard…in Your Pocket?

Eleksen Wireless Fabric Keyboard V1.5These days the devices we carry with ourselves are getting smaller and smarter. Smartphones are becoming more popular both in the business place as well as in the consumer space thanks to the success of the likes of Research In Motion’s Blackberry Smartphone platform and Apple’s iPhone. The designers of these devices are forced to compromise somewhere in order to come up with something that people can still put in their pocket and use. These compromises tend to come in the form of the input options available to users of the devices.

Designers have had two basic options previously, a phone number style keypad with predictive text input or somehow shoehorn in a small keyboard for users to thumb with. With predictive text input systems a user can deal with short messages, but anything longer than an SMS-length message is usually out of the question. On the phones with a built-in thumb-style keyboard there are different consequences of this design choice, usually resulting in either smaller screen sizes or keyboards too small to be useful for long emails. Of course, when the iPhone was introduced the third option, a virtual keyboard was revealed to everyone. All of these approaches have their tradeoffs and some work better for people then others.
But is there a better way to get input for your Smartphone while on the go? The Eleksen Wireless Fabric Keyboard is a worthy choice for all power Smartphone users to consider. You probably haven’t heard of Eleksen, a UK-based company that specializes in touch-sensitive interactive fabrics for wearable consumer electronics garments. Its main technology is ElekTex, an electro-conductive fabric touchpad optimized for the creation of flexible, durable and rugged fabric touch screen interfaces. Eleksen took this technology and mated it to a small Bluetooth module to create a wireless keyboard out of fabric that could be rolled up and fit into your pocket.

The Eleksen keyboard has a QWERTY layout comparable to a full-size keyboard, minus the numeric keypad in a series of five rows of keys. The keys are also color-coded by modal use of the SHIFT key as well. Due to how Eleksen’s ElekTex technology works the keyboard doesn’t support multiple-key chording, which only slightly alters how one uses the unit. To enter a capital letter for example, one would tap the SHIFT key followed by the letter key in question instead of chording the SHIFT key with the letter simultaneously.
The keyboard itself takes some getting used to as tactile feedback from keys is non-existent, however a user’s Smartphone can play a beep for each registered keypress as part of the Eleksen Smartphone driver to provide some feedback to the user. Eleksen provides drivers for practically all Smartphone platforms including Windows Mobile 2003/5/6, Symbian S60 v2/v3, UIQ, PalmOS, Blackberry OS4.1+ as well as for Windows XP. Previous versions of the keyboard had issues with staying in place on smooth flat surfaces, but Eleksen has placed strips of non-slip surface on the back of the keyboard so it will stay in place and this works well. In extensive use of the keyboard the only real aspect of it that requires time and training to get use to is the response characteristics of the spacebar. If you are the kind of typist who is used to just nonchalantly tapping the spacebar while typing, you may find that you have to use a bit more force when hitting the spacebar on the Eleksen for the keypress to register.

While the Eleksen keyboard is not perfect, considering the advantages of the unit’s form-factor for both portability as well as ease of typing it greatly offsets its minor shortcomings making it a strong competitor in the mobile accessory space. This performance, combined with its average street price of $75 makes it a great value for the money and a recommended buy.

4 months, 1 week ago

Adventures in Qikking

Since the beginning of Feburary 2008 I have been in the unique position to both own an imported Nokia N82 Symbian-based smartphone as well as have access to the beta trial for a new application and website that utilizes the platforms hardware and software potential and is called Qik. Based in San Mateo, CA the start-up currently creates software for Symbian powered mobile smartphones from Nokia, with plans to expand their client to other capable smartphone platforms like Windows Mobile in the future. Qik enables these advanced mobile smartphones to stream video using their built-in camera to the Internet, live, while receiving feedback in real-time from viewers on the Qik website. Qik also enables users to easily share and upload their videos to other video-centric websites like YouTube, Seesmic, and Mogulus while offering integration and notification to Pownce, Twitter, and Blogger.

Think about that for a moment there. Live video to the web, with viewer feedback. Real-time.


Video taken from RSA 2008 keynote using Qik and Nokia N82, handheld

This is the kind of use for advanced technology that allows one to talk about enabling citizen journalism on a massive scale without getting laughed out of a room full of journalism majors, or worse, broadcasters. However, one point that established media types will bring up is the concept of GIGO. Garbage in, garbage out. People used to watching news on major broadcast networks have a very high expectation of quality when it comes the the finished video product. Conversely, people who go to video websites like YouTube have a much lower expectation of quality because they don’t see it as competing with television or other traditional broadcast networks.

What does this mean for something like Qik however? It means that if people are going to use this application for something more serious then the more trendy lifecasting applications there has to be a concerned effort to work at improving the quality of the video output to Qik both in content and in raw video quality also. Improving the content of Qik videos is something that is outside of the scope of this article, but improving the raw video quality from Qik is not.

The biggest problem with getting good video out of these phones comes from the fact that they are, in essence, phones. There are camcorders that take better video, cameras which shoot better quality pictures, in essence these phones are technological compromises albeit getting less compromised with each revision. One of the biggest complaints about video quality however arises from Jerky-Cam(tm) a.k.a hand-holding the phone and not holding it steady enough. This has a two-fold effect on the video due to compression being done on the video. First, the video becomes more and more garbled as the codec struggles to keep the output video within the boundaries of the bandwidth limits its settings. Secondly, this additional movement causes the codec to spend more bits encoding movement leaving less bits available for detail in the scene.

The easiest way to combat shaky-cam is to mount the camera onto a tripod, yet this introduces some issues that are unique to the mobile video world I suspect. Chief among these is portability, after all we are talking about taking a small phone and now having to lug around a tripod that is many times the size and weight of the phone itself. More important however is the fact that the phone manufactures havent seen fit to add a standard 1/4″ screw thread mount point to their cameraphones, making use on photographic or video tripods more problematic then it should be.

DSC_8569
Partially extended Manfrotto 682B monopod

After looking around the market for solutions to this problem I had a brainstorm and came up with the following solution that I think is a good first step towards getting better video out of Qik and other video applications on the cameraphone in the future. Manfrotto is a well known and respected manufacturer of tripods, monopods, and other gear for photo and video professionals. As it turns out they make a self-standing monopod, the 682B, that lets you have a free-standing monopod. While this is not as stable a platform as a traditional tripod would be it is significantly lighter, smaller, and more portable then others. Using this as a platform for a Nokia N82 for use in Qik is a good compromise between size, weight, and stiffness. However, even using the monopod we still need a way to mount the cameraphone on. This is where the Nokia DT-22 universal tabletop tripod comes in. It comes with a screw-tight clamp that fits most all N series phones and easily detaches from the tabletop tripod and will screw onto a standard 1/4″ camera screw. If you wish to point the camera at various angles you will want to invest in an inexpensive ball mount for the monopod like the Manfrotto 484RC2 mini-ball head with quick-release plate mount.

DSC_8565
View of N82 from the front of the Monopod

However, we still have some other issues to address that are more difficult to handle with a mobile phone device. These devices are not equipped with the kinds of designs or battery life that enable them to take video for long periods of time, say and hour or more. Most of these phones would be bricks within the inside of an hour of doing live streaming video to the Internet. Because of this we also need a portable power supply to help augment our phones internal battery. This is where the PPC Techs Lil’Sync USB battery power supply comes in. It’s a 4400mah rated Li-Ion battery and it charges via mini-USB and can charge one device via a regular USB port. Combine this with a Nokia CA-100 USB to DC charging cable for your N series Nokia phone and you now have a way to keep the battery lasting longer for video recording.

DSC_8574
Velcro backing to hold Lil’Sync to Nokia DT-22 clamp

Now once you have assembled all these parts you may still have one important hurdle left to jump over if you live in the United States like I do, bandwidth. Unless you are using a Nokia N95-3 or N95-4 model designated for North American usage you will have imported a European GSM phone that has support for 3G networks only on European GSM frequencies and at best will only have access to an EDGE class network for streaming your video over. This means that any attempt to stream video, even if on lower quality settings and a 320×240 resolution in Qik will result in instant building delay between what users on Qik.com see verses what you are seeing in real-time with your phone. It also means getting user feedback will be greatly delayed or nonexistent as well. Short of having an N95 with support for North American 3G networks you will have to rely on WiFi networks for streaming. This works in fixed known locations, but not on the road in random places. For these situations there is a final part to this solution made by a company called Cradlepoint.

Cradlepoint makes EVDO to WiFi bridge routers, specifically the PHS300 or Personal Hotspot. The PHS300 has a built-in Li-Ion battery for 2-3 hours of use without having to be plugged into an outlet. Using an EVDO USB adapter or a EVDO ExpressCard/34 combined with an ExpressCard/34 to USB adapter along with a subscription to a subsequent EVDO unlimited data plan you can provide a WiFi signal to your Nokia with sufficent upstream bandwidth to support full real-time video streaming.

DSC_8568
Nokia N82 with Lil’Sync and CA-100 USB Charge Cable

At this stage I have assembled all of the parts mentioned in here except for the Cradlepoint PHS300 which is my next step. I may have to machine a custom mounting plate to hold the PHS300 and the Lil’Sync onto the camera ball-head mount. I will report back once I have acquired the unit and looked into integrating it into the monopod.

Ultimately however, there are still some issues with the phone as a streaming video platform. Namely, when someone calls you! When using Qik, if you get an incoming phone call your video will stop streaming and you wont be able to restart your video stream until after you get off of the phone, unless you are using WiFi for your streaming connection from what I have seen. The Qik client itself is also undergoing frequent changes and the company and its main coders are rather open to suggestions and enhancements to the program which is great.

8 months, 2 weeks ago

A cavalcade of cool photos (SFW)

Disclaimer - Don’t be drinking anything when you scroll to the last photo in this list.

I saw the below photo while scanning through Digg while waiting for some software to finish compiling. I think it is pretty telling as to why it seems so many people these days who are watching the various news networks are not as well informed as they once were. In a nutshell we can blame the proliferation and boosting of importance of fluff/celebrity “news” pieces. Oh yeah, and commercials for making sure you dont die/your dick feels big enough for your ego/buy a SUV/etc.

The reason the public is not well informed

Next up we have a high altitude photo taken from a NASA chase plane of the Space Shuttle Columbia taking off from Cape Canaveral

Here we have a graph of US national debt as a percentage of GDP. Notice the difference in spending patterns of the “new Republicans” verses the supposedly spend-fast Democrats. Just goes to show that sometimes parties change their mantras without people really realizing it. After all, GWB was supposed to be a small government Republican when he ran back in 2000. If we only could have had things gone differently.

I thought this piece of work was interesting because I have seen it used for both sides of debate on wether or not God exists. Atheists look at Nature and marvel at its complexity and beauty that it forms out of the natural laws that man has discovered and began to learn over the course of time. On the other hand, proponents of the existence of God look at something like this and point to it as proof that nature, reality and the whole of being must obviously be the work of a creator.

Ok, last but not least is this riotously hilarious photo from The Onion. I nearly choked on my drink when I saw this and simply had to share it with everyone. Don’t say I didn’t warn you earlier!

1 year, 2 months ago

Hello, and welcome to Kwik-E-Mart!

Last night on the way home from Culver City down back home I had to stop and take photos of what was causing a ridiculous amount of traffic at Sepulveda and Venice. Turns out that the 7-11 store that was at the corner there was one of the 12 selected to be converted into a “Kwik-E-Mart” convenience store as part of the marketing push for The Simpsons movie coming out on July 27th.

Overall it was pretty badass, you could buy a copy of Issue #1 of Radioactive Man comic books, Krusty-O’s cereal, Buzz Cola, and get “Squishee’s”. Sadly, there was no Duff Beer since the movie is only rated PG-13 and the movie execs apparently didn’t want to associate beer with the movie which is understandable. I took these photos around 9:30PM on a Sunday night and as you can see, the store was packed. It was bananas!

More photos are here

1 year, 4 months ago

Photos are up now

 Jason’s 30th birthday:


http://www.nonmundane.org/gallery2/v/jasons_30th_bday/

My 31st birthday:


http://www.nonmundane.org/gallery2/v/dans_31st_bday/

Downright @ DiPiazza’s 4-14-07:


http://www.nonmundane.org/gallery2/v/downright_show_4-14-07/

1 year, 5 months ago

Guess who else has a blog?

So as it turns out my uncle Tony in Florida has recently started up his own blog for his rants and opinions. I guess it comes as no surprise to me that he is opinionated since everyone in the family holds pretty strong opinions on just about anything and we don’t have any problems letting people know what they are! In any case, if you’re feeling bored, curious, or want a view into the mind of an ex-Air Force guy then take a look at his site, it will hopefully make you chuckle a little or at least think about things from a different perspective.

1 year, 5 months ago

Links and Stories from my 41 open tabs in Firefox

That’s right, I’ve got 41 tabs open in Firefox right now and that’s just for stories and other interesting bits of information I haven’t gotten around to posting in the past week and a half because I’ve been busy with finals or work to some degree. Mind you, I have more than 41 tabs open in Firefox in total right now; the total number is something closer to about 60 something. Having that many web pages open is using 243.7MB of RAM on the system right now so I thought I’d finally dump these suckers into a post so I can clear the cruft out of my tabs.

Dead whale explodes in Taiwan, without the help of explosives:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4096586

Recent analysis of just how fucked we are if a nuclear attack happens in a major US city:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/emergingtech/?p=522

Sony UK boss thinks Americans are “cheap”:
http://www.playfuls.com/news_06695_Sony_UK_Boss_Calls
_the_US_a_Land_of_Cheap_People_to_Justify_PS3_Price.html

An MIT acceptance letter and its resulting response:
http://www.cartalk.com/content/features/hell/Bestof/mit-letter.html

Tim O’Reilly and Doc Searls seem to think they know how to save newspapers, I’m not so sure:
http://doc.weblogs.com/2007/03/24

10 things about software development that had to be learned on the job:
http://www.taylor.se/blog/2007/03/22/top-ten-things-ten-years-of-
professional-software-development-has-taught-me/

The CG Society’s EON film trailer challenge winners, some very impressive work indeed!
http://features.cgsociety.org/story_custom.php?story_id=3987&page=2

A list of things that will take you 50 years to learn, or you could just read it here:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/3716/ebookebook-16-things-it-takes-most-of-us-50-years-to-learn

Human brain is a poor judge of risk….hmmm, sounds like a certain administration I know:
http://www.wired.com/news/columns/1,73047-0.html

Do you like heavy metal music? Then you might be smarter than you think potentially:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/connected/main.jhtml?xml=/connected/2007/03/21/nmetal21.xml

Some good information on Google AdSense ads and how to use them effectively:
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/03/22/google-adsense-facts-faqs-and-tools/

New X-ray imagery of the Sun reveals previously thought impossible acts:
http://space.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn11432&feedId=online-news_rss20

MoveOn pokes a little fun at Stephen Colbert with this parody:
http://falsiness.org/

Tony Snow once abdicated against Executive privilege with regards to subpoenaed testimony of White House staffers:
http://americablog.blogspot.com/2007/03/tony-snow-says-president-must-let-his.html

White House offers up Rove for testimony…just without a transcript, or under oath. Talk about insulting our intelligence!
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Conyers_Sanchez_to_seek_subpoenas_of_0320.html

The world’s first blue rose, pretty wild if you ask me:
http://www.thestreaming.info/development_crossing/2007/03/the_worlds_only.html

A gated community in Tennessee thinks it has the right to revoke the 2nd Amendment under its community rules:
http://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=6242822

A Republican from Texas who claims he would “reinstate the Constitution” if elected, sounds interesting to me:
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/GOP_Presidential_candidate_would_restore_Constitution_0321.html

Tech hits wrong key in Alaska and wipes out 38 BILLION dollar fund, hope they had backups:
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2007-03-20-alaska-data_N.htm?csp=34

NFL tried to take copyright and DMCA too far with Superbowl and now faces breaking DMCA itself:
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070320-nfl-fumbles-dmca-takedown-battle-could-face-sanctions.html

Why I love NPR more than ever now that the CPR is trying to kill off Internet radio for the RIAA. Et al:
http://consumerist.com/consumer/riaa/npr-vs-the-riaa-244318.php

Not only do they not have enough armor, but our troops don’t even have the best carbine in their hands. Truly maddening:
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/02/atCarbine070219/

Using Bluetooth as a proximity sensor to lock/unlock your OS X laptop:
http://www.technocrat.ca/?p=44

The AppleTV system is looking to be a worthy replacement for aging XBOX Media Center softmod systems:
http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=2391956&perpage=40&pagenumber=9

Free speech case for high school students goes to Supreme Court, looks to divide Bush and his religious right base:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/18/washington/18scotus.html?ei=5124&en=9751776d478fdf0f&ex=1331870400&partner=digg&exprod=digg&pagewanted=print

How to not let your IT department become like Dilbert (good luck):
http://www.eweek.com/print_article2/0,1217,a=203343,00.asp

1 year, 5 months ago

Finals are over! What is Spring Break?

So last week marked that 10 week annual festival for me known as finals week, or 10 ways to get sleep deprivation on the cheap while chugging Red Bull like it was going out of style. This time the assailants were statistics, operating systems theory, human computer interaction and networking. Overall I feel like I did okay on some of these, I probably could have done better on the statistics and HCI class but I just sort of let myself get swamped around midterm’s time and it took a while to get things back in order after that. This being said, I now have just three more quarters left at UC Irvine Spring, Summer, and Fall 2007 after which point I graduate provided nothing horrible happens.

Of course, today is now officially my 3rd day of “Spring Break™” and I have the following to do:

  1. Call someone in San Diego regarding a project I did network design work on
  2. Write up invoice of current outstanding billable hours
  3. Do my taxes in a vain hope I will be owed money
  4. Try to work as much as possible this week to offset extreme lack of money right now

There would have been an additional item on that list for me to have a phone interview with Apple so their engineers could see if they wanted me for something to do with the company. This is actually now the second time that Apple has emailed me and said that they wished to interview me on the phone. Of course when I get these kinds of emails I am very polite and thank them for the interest and inform then that:

  1. I’m taking 12 units during the summer and not available for internship positions
  2. I’m graduating at the end of 2007 and thus can’t work fulltime until probably February 2008

I have to admit it is somewhat frustrating to have to append this information to recruiters and HR people constantly. My resume clearly states my expected graduation date. Even more frustrating is the fact that the Apple recruiter that was on campus for the engineering jobs fair that I gave my resume to is what caused these last two interests at Apple to be generated. I specifically told them that I was not available for internships and was interested in full-time opportunities after graduation. I guess it just goes to show what a hard job recruiters and HR people have these days if they don’t have the time to read my resume. I’ve considered modifying my current resume so at the top it reads “NOT AVAILABLE FOR INTERNSHIPS” followed by “NOT AVAILABLE FOR FULL-TIME WORK TIL FEB 2008″. I’d probably put it in blinking text too if I could find a way to do it in a PDF just to make me point clearer.

In any case, Spring 2007 quarter is going to be a bear for me. I will be taking two senior project classes, one in networking and the other in HCI, along with an artificial intelligence class and the first of three world history classes. Hopefully I will manage them decently. I already have a reading assignment for my history class if I want to get a head start on things. Heck, they are even going to have the discussion section meet on the first day of class which I almost never see happen these days.

This brings me to the topic of Spring Break. Spring Break has been turned into this mythical time where students go somewhere sunny and beach-like, or perhaps a large lake. Whatever the case, someplace where multiple people also on Spring Break go and congregate and frolic, imbibe excessive amounts of alcohol and generally engage in casual sex.

Damn I sound like a bitter old man there.

What can I say, the few times I’ve happened across MTV while they were broadcasting whichever particular incantation of Spring Break in <INSERT HOPPING PLACE HERE> it almost seems like an event wholly fabricated from cloth.

Granted, I’m probably not the most hip person I know of, but I tend to at least have a decent grasp of what is going on around me. And the Spring Break of MTV and movies just doesn’t seem to happen with anyone I know of or am friends with. There is a part of me that wonders if I am missing out on something worthwhile, some kind of bonding with friends or whatnot. I don’t know. Of course, being nearly broke during ones massive week long vacation doesn’t really help either.




About the Author

Daniel Spisak

Daniel Spisak was born from the fiery depths of fusion and now roams the pale blue dot known as Earth. I obtained my bachelors degree in Computer Science from UC Irvine at the end of 2007.

I am also involved in technology & security consulting firms as well as being a freelance technology writer. I also contribute to Jerry Pournelle's website and Chaos Manor Reviews. Additionally I am also a freelance photographer as well and you can find my photos either on my own personal gallery or up at my Flickr account or on Zivity.

This blog is one of the main locations where I do my writing, which is then automatically sent to my LiveJournal, VOX, and MySpace accounts. I can also be found on a variety of social networking and microblogging sites like Pownce, Twitter, Brightkite, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

If your viewing this site with Internet Explorer it may not look correct because IE is horrible about following W3C web standards properly or consistently. I suggest you try browsing the Internet with Firefox. It is much better and not as vulnerable to security flaws as IE can be.

My Current Qik Video

Daniel Spisak's Flickr

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