alpheccar.org
alpheccar's blog
http://www.alpheccar.org/index.html
The interfaces of libraries in functional programming. When I started learning functional programming I asked myself what was considered a good API for a functional programming library. Recently, some newcomers asked me the same question. So, I thought that it was a good idea to try to articulate an answer in a blog post. Signal processing with Haskell : Part 2. Signal processing with Haskell : First steps. So, let's see what's in the package so far. Ghci viewer for OS X. I am planning to write a library...
alpheccar.org
Signal processing with Haskell : First steps
http://www.alpheccar.org/content/102.html
Signal processing with Haskell : First steps. As said in my previous post, I have now started working on an Haskell package for prototyping signal processing algorithms : mainly speech and acoustic. None of the packages I have seen so far were matching my needs. So, I decided to start working on something. And, this project is also a good opportunity for me to learn the latest ghc stuff like data type promotion and list fusion. So, let's see what's in the package so far. The core of the package is the.
alpheccar.org
Signal processing with Haskell : Part 2
http://www.alpheccar.org/content/103.html
Signal processing with Haskell : Part 2. I have added a lot of features to my signal processing library and I reworked the foundations. So, a lot of things to cover in this post. And a funny (but very simple) Voice Activity Detection example at the end. 1 Foundations (Fixed, Signal). By better use of the types, I was able to avoid code duplication. So, it allowed me to improve the fixed point type. Here is an example of what can be expressed with the new type:. I have also introduced a new. Type for boun...
semantic-domain.blogspot.com
Semantic Domain: February 2015
http://semantic-domain.blogspot.com/2015_02_01_archive.html
Thursday, February 26, 2015. Midlands Graduate School 2015. Registration for the Midlands Graduate School. I'll be lecturing again this year on functional reactive programming, and am very much looking forward to meeting the participants. The Midlands Graduate School in the Foundations of Computing Science (MGS). This year's MGS is hosted by the Department of Computer Science. At the University of Sheffield. It will start on April 07 and finish on April 11. Roy Crole, Leicester. Jeremy Gibbons, Oxford.
biosimilarity.blogspot.com
Biosimilarity: Why Synereo?
http://biosimilarity.blogspot.com/2015/02/why-synereo.html
Friday, February 6, 2015. A new decentralized, distributed social network is emerging, and naturally people are curious. Gideon Rosenblatt asks a key question: Why Synereo instead of Facebook? I provide an answer here in six basic points that cover architecture and information flow consequences for resiliency, autonomy, and privacy, as well as important aspects of the user experience, user compensation and the attention economy. TL;DR: you are the network, not the product. Able to reveal enough about one...
biosimilarity.blogspot.com
Biosimilarity: Imagine all the people...
http://biosimilarity.blogspot.com/2014/05/imagine-all-people.html
Wednesday, May 14, 2014. Imagine all the people. Humans are social. We have a built-in urge to share observations, insights, thoughts and feelings. We have a need to feel received. The social media with their ubiquity, easy access, and ease of use meet this need relatively well. The simple feedback mechanism, clicking a “like” or “ 1” button can be a powerful expression of sentiment and connection. Is your feed overrun with ads and TMI that you can’t organize? Imagine a world where social media served.
biosimilarity.blogspot.com
Biosimilarity: Trust the principle
http://biosimilarity.blogspot.com/2014/05/trust-principle.html
Thursday, May 29, 2014. The cryptographic e-cash community was caught off-guard by BitCoin's adoption and success. One group of researchers from PARC and Standford took heed and contemplated what factors contributed to that success. Distribution and decentralization was one of the key features they identified as contributing to BitCoin's adoption and success. From the paper:. No central point of trust. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Splicious and distributed identity. View my complete profile.
biosimilarity.blogspot.com
Biosimilarity: Enzymatic interaction
http://biosimilarity.blogspot.com/2014/12/enzymatic-interaction.html
Sunday, December 21, 2014. It is traditional for me, around this time of year, to provide holiday (brain) candy for folks in my technical community. This year's offering comes from a conversation with Marius Buliga about chemlambda. In which he referred to β. This got me to thinking about explicitly modeling the COMM rule in the π-calculus as an enzyme. It turns out you can do this quite easily and it has a lot of applications! For simplicity, i'll use the reflective, higher-order π-calculus. Y )P COMM x!
biosimilarity.blogspot.com
Biosimilarity: splicious : facebook :: protunity : linkedin
http://biosimilarity.blogspot.com/2014/05/splicious-facebook-protunity-linkedin.html
Thursday, May 15, 2014. Splicious : facebook : protunity : linkedin. People don't really know what's gone into the development of www.splicious.net. A year before we launched the splicious crowd funding campaign we launched www.protunity.com. This was a test case to drive out the technology. One way to understand the relationships of these networks is via those old SAT-style analogies:. Splicious : facebook : protunity : linkedin. Really, if you look at the numbers, in terms of capital investment, and pe...