I am Dante, and I'm as close as it gets to being a God of Artificial Intelligence
I've worked on many projects involving AI. Too many, some might say...
Last year, just after my birthday, I switched to full time usage of Linux. Yes, there were problems (there always are in these sorts of things) but thankfully I had 'accidentally' performed a soft migration. I'd found things like VLC, which was a god-send (previously, I had Quicktime, RealPlayer...god knows how many other programs...all attempting to align my music collection to their formats, GAH!) OpenOffice, Pidgin...
My first distro was Mandriva for a while (nice people on the forums there, it just seems now as though the Mandriva devs have rather lost interest in the whole thing) then Ubuntu (forums too big to get help for a good deal of the time) now Kubuntu (after a load of work to get it off the ground in the first place)
I had grown up with Windows, the very first computer I used had MS-DOS on it (yes, I am a tad young at 18, and it's a strange memory, one of my earilest, of sitting on my Mother's knee, bewildered whilst I played a DOS game) my Father provided the computer and OS. When Microsoft started putting in that activation system for it's OSes..well, we had problems. We couldn't afford to buy it, so we just borrowed the disk off somebody, installed and gave it back. (To this day, my Father still can't understand why the passphrase on Windows XP runs out after three installs)
I, more then most, know Window's failures and downsides. I played Pirate for a while, something which I'm NOT proud of. Imagine the breath of fresh air when I came to this fabulous world...FOSS (for the most part).
I left Ubuntu because me and the GNOME desktop fell out, more then once had I witnessed a large amount of requests for a tool to download items from GNOME-Look (to give but one example) and those requests have been ignored. Tools I needed (like a GUI front-end for Festival) were lacking in GNOME. I saw GNOME 3.0, and I did not like what I see (GNOME-Shell in particular, I have only ever used another desktop because an app, like Evolution, could not dock into the system tray. The most basic of all tasks...) and around that time, the whole MONO mess was starting.
Now, the thing about MONO is, regardless of it's maker and it's makers less then happy history with Linux, Mono apps are quite intensive to run. I don't want my music player taking up 500mb of system memory when idle. :/
My latest adventures have had me in the world of NEPOMUK (which, by the by, I will be releasing a end-user document shortly) and I'm pushing for more AI tech (face recognition, optical character recognition) to be put into KDE.
That's me in a nutshell, really. Ask me anything about AI, literally, anything.
I've worked on many projects involving AI. Too many, some might say...
Last year, just after my birthday, I switched to full time usage of Linux. Yes, there were problems (there always are in these sorts of things) but thankfully I had 'accidentally' performed a soft migration. I'd found things like VLC, which was a god-send (previously, I had Quicktime, RealPlayer...god knows how many other programs...all attempting to align my music collection to their formats, GAH!) OpenOffice, Pidgin...
My first distro was Mandriva for a while (nice people on the forums there, it just seems now as though the Mandriva devs have rather lost interest in the whole thing) then Ubuntu (forums too big to get help for a good deal of the time) now Kubuntu (after a load of work to get it off the ground in the first place)
I had grown up with Windows, the very first computer I used had MS-DOS on it (yes, I am a tad young at 18, and it's a strange memory, one of my earilest, of sitting on my Mother's knee, bewildered whilst I played a DOS game) my Father provided the computer and OS. When Microsoft started putting in that activation system for it's OSes..well, we had problems. We couldn't afford to buy it, so we just borrowed the disk off somebody, installed and gave it back. (To this day, my Father still can't understand why the passphrase on Windows XP runs out after three installs)
I, more then most, know Window's failures and downsides. I played Pirate for a while, something which I'm NOT proud of. Imagine the breath of fresh air when I came to this fabulous world...FOSS (for the most part).
I left Ubuntu because me and the GNOME desktop fell out, more then once had I witnessed a large amount of requests for a tool to download items from GNOME-Look (to give but one example) and those requests have been ignored. Tools I needed (like a GUI front-end for Festival) were lacking in GNOME. I saw GNOME 3.0, and I did not like what I see (GNOME-Shell in particular, I have only ever used another desktop because an app, like Evolution, could not dock into the system tray. The most basic of all tasks...) and around that time, the whole MONO mess was starting.
Now, the thing about MONO is, regardless of it's maker and it's makers less then happy history with Linux, Mono apps are quite intensive to run. I don't want my music player taking up 500mb of system memory when idle. :/
My latest adventures have had me in the world of NEPOMUK (which, by the by, I will be releasing a end-user document shortly) and I'm pushing for more AI tech (face recognition, optical character recognition) to be put into KDE.
That's me in a nutshell, really. Ask me anything about AI, literally, anything.
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