Category Archives: Life

Stuff about my life

2011 Round-Up

It’s been another year, I’ve procrastinated, explored, learned, worked, dossed about and more.  But mostly procrastinated and dossed about.

I did the Imagine Cup ,that was probably the highlight of my year really, travelling to the states was incredible and I can’t wait to go back some day.  I still haven’t done most of the things I posted in the list back at the start of this blog.

I’m quitting drinking alcohol for new years, and as a sort of side-resolution I’ll be making a serious effort to improve my physical fitness from now on too.  (I don’t really have any problem specifically, I just feel I’d be happier without alcohol and with a bit more muscle!).

Well, I hope everyone has a prosperous and happy new year!

- Damo

The duplicity of iParadigms LLC and TurnItIn

I am a careful writer.  Not in the sense that my writing isn’t scattered with spelling errors and misuse of punctuation; but in the sense that I am careful about where I source my facts and how I attribute them.  I have never been on the wrong end of the plagiarism stick, never accidentally, and certainly never deliberately – if I can’t do the work, I’ll chew on the failure that comes with that rather than be branded a charlatan and a cheat, and I certainly won’t get caught up in the victimisation of the careless.

TurnItIn is a system used by schools, colleges and other academic establishments to check for plagiarism and originality in works.  It works by collecting up a huge database off the web of documents, essays, articles and the like, then comparing submitted documents with what it has on file.  If there are blocks of text that are similar, either identical word for word or closely paraphrased, the submission is flagged as unoriginal and questions are no doubt asked of the author.  When I read about TurnItIn, I thought “what an excellent idea” – finally, using the massive computing power and storage resources we have available in the Internet age, we can have a compendium of works that can be used to evaluate the originality supposed of new creations.

I then learned that TurnItIn has another feature – it actually collects work that have been submitted – so every student that writes an essay for a university that uses the service has their work put permanently on file for comparison with future submissions by other students.  I began to consider the legal implications of this behaviour.  Effectively, TurnItIn violates the copyrights owned by every student that has ever submitted a piece of work via their University or college.  Just like a teenager that has amassed a huge quantity of stolen digital music from around the Internet, TurnItIn has collected a truly colossal volume of works.  They aren’t just holding these works for themselves either – they are essentially monetising this collection by making it a cornerstone of their service – without this collected data, TurnItIn wouldn’t have such a strong selling point in this market.

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Lest We Forget

~       11 / 11 / 2011      ~

Damo in NYC – Part 3

I have just returned from the closing awards ceremony of the Microsoft Imagine Cup 2011 here in the wonderful city that is New York.  I can’t even begin to describe how much of a rush the last week has been.  I have met some amazing people, made some great friends, got some excellent networking done, seen some incredible projects and ideas put in to action and I can’t wait to have an opportunity to do it all again next year in Sydney, Australia.  The entire experience has left me full of excitement and energy that I feel I can focus on putting some more of my own ideas in to action myself, coding some great new projects using the technologies that I have learned about and putting in to use some of the hardware that Microsoft has kindly gifted to me (along with all, yes all of the other finalists).  I refer of course, to the Microsoft Xbox Kinect device that I am positively itching to get plugged in to a PC and to start writing some wonderful fun code for.

Flying the Flag

Flying the Flag - The flag of the United States of America flying high above Ellis Island

I feel like I need some time to relax before I can properly reflect on how incredible the week has been, but I’ll do my best to sum up some of the general sentiments of the competition.  The ultimate message that has come over to me is that it genuinely does not matter how your team fairs in the competitions; here at the Imagine Cup, everyone is a winner (despite the fact that at least among the UK guys that has become a colossal cliché).  I want to make it clear to everyone reading that once past the initial sting of disappointment upon not hearing your name and country called out by the guys on stage, there are no bitter feelings left behind at all – just being here is more than enough to put a smile on your face.

Kevin's Presentation

Kevin's Presentation - Our "1-Man Army" Kevin making his final round Embedded Development presentation

Every single person at the Imagine Cup finals has achieved something incredible already – we are working to change the world for the better, to bring solutions to the world’s biggest problems.  It’s not about money or companies or start-ups or anything else – at the core of it, we’re here to make the world a better place – and the teams that have that at heart are the teams that do the best here – I’ve seen that first hand.

NYC Skyline

I'll leave you with this wonderful NYC Skyline

I hope that next year we’ll have an even stronger project to bring to the Imagine Cup 2012 UK Finals and that I’ll be writing another post with a similar tone about the upcoming world finals in Sydney.  Although the UK entries didn’t achieve winning positions this year, we’re not disgruntled and certainly not discouraged, we plan to hit next year with a driving force to change the world, after all – that’s what it’s all about.

Damo in NYC – Part 2

I’m here! Currently sat in the Internet Café in the Marriott on the 5th floor typing a blog post after a long day touring the massive city that is NYC.  But before I start on the wonderful sights and sounds of the city, there’s some competition news to share…

Team UK

Team UK - (Left to Right: Phil Cross, Ben Nunney, JP Lacerda, Me, Sam Van Lieshout)

Sadly we didn’t make it through the first round of the finals; but our presentation was absolutely top notch with no serious cock-ups yet the competition was just as strong.  During the showcase yesterday we saw some incredible projects on display, and everyone there deserves a massive pat on the back for the truly incredible work they’ve done.  It’s not all downhill though, we’ve got the rest of the week in this incredible city ahead of us, the weather is perfect, the people are great and we’ve still got our main man Kevin Pfister representing the UK in the field of Embedded Development! His awesome project has got him in to the final round of the Imagine Cup World Finals – an absolutely incredible achievement.

The view from my hotel room at the Marriott

The view from my hotel room at the Marriott

This afternoon Microsoft reserved Ellis Island (yes, the entire island) for a private BBQ, we also got the opportunity to see Liberty Island and the statue of liberty which was an absolutely incredible experience; before seeing the NYC skyline as the day drew to a close.  Perfection.

More posts soon.