Lego Sorter Build Log 1: Neural Networking

My current project is an automated Lego sorting machine. I’ve seen a few other blogs showing off their Lego sorters. They’re super cool! But they usually show off the completed final result and skip all the interesting learning that happened along the way. This series is going to be the build log of the process of designing, building and programming this thing. So far, the sorter does… well, nothing. But that’s getting a bit ahead of the story. [Read More]

Wearable Software Principles

I’ve been writing software for Decker for about 4 years. During that time I’ve experimented a bit with what what works for having a display constantly in my line of sight. Rule 1: Make it Useful First People (including yours truly) will put up with bad UX if the program solves a need. But useless software never gets run. There are whole books to be written about how to write useful software, but one good technique is to start from a problem. [Read More]

Decker FAQ

I get the same set of questions about Decker… a lot. Frequently, even. So let’s just knock them all out here: Why? I’ve wanted a head-mounted computer since I was just a wee nerdlet. I thought it was cool and have pursued making one off and on for years. Unfortunately, I’m really not much of an electronics guy, so for most of that time I would run up against the necessity of soldering a video input board from a VCR onto a display unit from a camcorder and decide it just wasn’t worth it. [Read More]
decker 

First Post

I decided I might as well get in on this new “blogging” thing I’ve heard so much about. So why now? Well, over the past few years I’ve worked on a bunch of weird technical projects that took my fancy and I wanted to write down some of the lessons learned… and just sorta have a place to geek about about some of the technical details that excite me but don’t often get covered in a normal human conversation. [Read More]