16 April 2007

Using Using Hyperbolic Geometry for Visualisation of Concept Spaces for Adaptive eLearning (PDF) - View as HTML (Concept Spaces are traditionally visualised using a concept map diagram requiring visibility of detail without repeated zooming, and visibility of whole concepts without obscuring detail, in an easy-to-use interface.)

ImageMagick : http://www.imagemagick.org/script/index.php translate, flip, mirror, rotate, scale, shear and transform images, adjust image colors, apply various special effects, or draw text, lines, polygons, ellipses and Bézier curves.

Creating the clippable index grid

Considerable research effort has been expended on formalising graphical notations so that they may play a more central role in the application of logic to problems; notations specifically designed for computer implementation either as computational models or interface languages. http://vivid.cs.dal.ca/VLL/ Examples include relational and existential graphs (C.S.Peirce), conceptual graphs (J.F. Sowa), various flavours of semantic networks, such as conceptual dependency graphs (R. Schank), graphical deduction systems, such as clause interconnectivity graphs (S. Sickel), Venn diagrams, Euler diagrams, constraint diagrams, and visual logic programming languages.

Inverted Perspective

50 best tech products: The complete list

KW Institute for Contemporary Art : http://www.kw-berlin.de/english/set_index.htm is regularly listed among Germany's foremost modern art institutions. Via

Forum ponderings about my 05 April 2007 entry regarding "'CubicAO ".

"Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back." - Robert Lee Frost (1874 – 1963)
"Ideas are like stars, you will not succeed in touching them with your hands, but like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your guides, and, following them, you reach your destiny. " - Carl Schurz
"It is better to be roughly right than precisely wrong. "- John Maynard Keynes Via
"The loser is always at fault." - Vasily Panov
"Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet." - Rudyard Kipling