Wednesday, 23 May 2018

NOTABILITY

One of the apps I use most and has become utterly indispensible is NOTABILITY. A note taking application that is maxed out.

It works on mac/pc and iOS devices, can import just about anything from photos, sounds, links, pdfs, graphs, shapes etc. and, most important for me, works perfectly with an Apple pencil on iPad. Everything is automatically synced across all platforms and every sketch I make is in 'vector' format so it can be zoomed into infinitely. Essentially it makes all sketches analogue rather than digital.


The reason I bring it up is the the newest update will take all handwritten notes (I have 100's) and make them searchable. It can even convert notes to speech. I've been playing with the new version all morning and it's amazing. All my notes are written in calligraphy or my own hand writing and being able to search through these now is something I wasn't expecting. Even without an iPad it's well worth a look. It is very suitable for young 'uns too as it is incredibly simple yet is capable of super advanced functionality if needed. Another reason it's good is that a child can practice handwriting because the program will read it correctly if it can be read and does this at a near human level.




Jab









Tuesday, 22 May 2018

AI AND DARK PHOTOS

Badly lit jpeg photos repaired with nothing more than machine learning.. Jab


Watch how machine learning can enhance low-light images

Boing Boing · by Andrea James · May 22, 2018
At this year's Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, researcher Chen Chen presented a cool project that vastly improves the quality of images captured in low-light conditions.
Imaging in low light is challenging due to low photon count and low SNR. Short-exposure images suffer from noise, while long exposure can induce blur and is often impractical. A variety of denoising, deblurring, and enhancement techniques have been proposed, but their effectiveness is limited in extreme conditions, such as video-rate imaging at night. To support the development of learning-based pipelines for low-light image processing, we introduce a dataset of raw short-exposure low-light images, with corresponding long-exposure reference images. Using the presented dataset, we develop a pipeline for processing low-light images, based on end-to-end training of a fully-convolutional network. The network operates directly on raw sensor data and replaces much of the traditional image processing pipeline, which tends to perform poorly on such data. We report promising results on the new dataset, analyze factors that affect performance, and highlight opportunities for future work.
Here's the full project page for more information.

Sunday, 20 May 2018

RANDOM VIDEO OF THE DAY

When I get the VIDEOS module added to the Screens app these are the type of videos you could play at random at any time of the day. Could be a class feature: one random video pops up at a certain time. Jab



QUILLBOT

Not sure if this is useful (yet) but I'm keeping my eye on it. It seems like a thesaurus for phrases. Jab




QUILLBOT

CIRCUIT GAME

Might be a bit fiddly to use and not as good as Minecraft for circuits but thought I'd add it as a maybe. Jab


Circuit Maze Logic Game

When I was a child my favorite game was Mousetrap because the experience wasn't simply about rolling dice and moving around a board. Rather, it was an invitation to construct environments with the reward of something special happening.
I still enjoy games where you build but I especially love it when they offer clever, valuable lessons as well. Circuit Maze teaches spacial reasoning and electrical engineering with simple to understand concepts. As you play, the levels naturally get more difficult and are challenging even to adults.
If your child is interested in games at even higher tech levels, there's also a game series called CODE that teaches the valuable superpower of computer coding concepts. I only wish I had access to these games when I was young.

MACHINE LEARNING FOR KIDS

Check out this site. Some great starting points for AI/Machine learning and all aimed at kids n' classrooms. Works in Scratch. Jab


Saturday, 19 May 2018

'MINI YOU's

I do love these. Simple idea, 720 pieces to make any one you know. Bought some for myself. Jab


BrickHeadz: Go Brick Me LEGO Review (DIY x2!)

slashgear.com · April 10, 2018

There’s a new sort of LEGO set in town, and it’s all about the brand’s new label: BrickHeadz. This is the “Go Brick Me” box set, and it’s as entertaining as it is challenging to wrap one’s mind around. What on earth is such a strange collection of odd pieces doing presenting itself as a LEGO make-it-your-own set? And why didn’t LEGO think of this a long, long time ago?
In the first Go Brick Me set, the user gets one massive number of bricks compiled in order to give you a variety of options. These options apply to the LEGO BrickHeadz universe of custom-made collectable figurines. You might recognize the scale of these figures as sort-of similar to that of Funko POP.