Rule-violation edition
It was a fun DemoCampMontreal3. Without further ado, here is what happened at the event.
1. Evan Prodromou, Nicolas Ritoux – Vinismo
Evan and Nicolas presented a new website, a guide for Wine connoisseurs, based on MediaWiki. Evan described how his experience with WikiTravel allowed him to build upon the core engine used there for Vinismo. The latter’s MediaWiki site is customized heavily. There is an integrated open-id extension among others, and the site also outputs semantic data through RDF. You could see that a lot of thought had gone into the underlying architecture of the system.
Nicolas also took a turn at presenting, this time in French, and spoke about how the site had been structured. The logo and the site design were made here in Montreal. The Vinismo team came to DemoCampMontreal3 with a powerful argument about the subject as no less than nine bottles of the finest wines were available freely (‘free’ as in ‘free wine’) at the SAT bar.
Update: Evan wrote in to mention they paid the SAQ retail for the wines.
Dedicated to accurate reporting, I duly sacrificed myself to sample some of the wines in between demonstrations.
Simon and some other people were convinced I was next to present. They confused me with Heri somehow. It could have been the wine.
2. Heri Rakotomalala – WorkCruncher
Heri demonstrated his online application for daily tasks. It’s a simple application with tasks that gets reinitialized each day. This means there’s some pressure involved for you to actually finish those tasks the same day. Heri emphasized that it wasn’t a feature-packed application, but a simple tool for personal productivity. Workcruncher would be available later as private beta.
Workcruncher allows teams to work together as you can assign tasks to a team member. There are also ‘followers’ who are people who can have a look at the tasks and the advancement, but to whom tasks cannot be assigned.
It’s a simple, even simplistic application which is easily built with Ruby on Rails and I’m sure Heri used RoR.
3. Mat Balez, Carl Mercier – Defensio
Mat started the presentation while Carl demonstrated an incarnation of Defensio, their learning spam-fighting software, as a WordPress plugin. Mat compared Defensio to Wordpress’s standard spam-filter, Akismet. Defensio has a ’spaminess’ level, which enables one to specify a threshold above which the spam entries are hidden on your administrative page. This helps identify false-positives and thus letting your genuine comments through. There’s also the option of hiding the spam content, which helps.
At this point, to me these were only additional features that could be implemented anytime within the Akismet source code. however, when Carl described Defensio in more detail, I realized there are additional advantages to the system. For instance, they have gone further with their API than Akismet’s. In addition, Defensio can run as a web service and protect anytime there’s an input of data on a web-form somewhere.
Technology used: Ruby on Rails.
To the absolute and audible horror of the audience, the Defensio team presented a few slides! Gasp! This means that they’ll have to pay some beers around to atone for their sins (the ‘no-slide’ rule of DemoCamp is a definite no-no). Simon was aghast, but had to regain composure quickly as he was presenting next, spurred on and introduced by Tamu, in a ravishing red summer dress.
4. Simon Law – Building a Revolutionary Magnet-Based Anti-Aging Device using a Cheap Wall Clock (Made in China)
The internet was abuzz with the possibility of Simon Law’s extremely controversial demo because of the totally ludicrous claims that it violated some well-established laws of science and provided a clean, free, means of reversing aging by drawing energy from the ether.
We scientists are known to cry “hogwash” to such claims as we dutifully follow our own laws. Anything else would be too high a cognitive dissonance for us to continue to function properly in this world. Understandably, the scientific community was skeptical of the claims about the magnet-based device.
Undaunted, Simon had built up a select panel of PhD-level scientists to explore the device’s capabilities under NDA and try to contradict his outrageous claims.
Besides, to demonstrate his seriousness, Simon had stopped taking investments from interested investors, and lately had stopped eating altogether until he could demonstrate in a foolproof manner the mythical device at work. Maybe that’s why he confused me with Heri earlier – everything’s a blur on an empty stomach.
To put a final nail in the coffin of skepticism, Simon had scheduled a highly-conspicuous televised and webcasted demonstration of how to build the device at the SAT, replete with real-time video cameras and onlookers in the flesh, knowing perfectly well that there would be reports of DemoCampMontreal3 all around the net in a jiffy.
Well, who knows? Tesla did something similar I gather, so he might be onto something.
Skeptic: “But it violates the Second Law of Ther…:”
Simon: “My NAME is Law!”
And besides, people do the strangest of things with magnets.
Simon dived right into the presentation, and my friend Philippe Chrun could hear me laughing all the time because it was reminiscent of Simon’s previous Omelette-Engineering presentation at DemoCampCUSEC1, and I was asking myself “Now what??!!”.
At one point in time though, Simon had his notepad filmed with the device’s structure drawn in pen on paper. This caused further outraged in the already weary (and wine-induced ethanol torpor) audience.
“Isn’t that a similar thing as a Powerpoint slide?!!!!”
Some boos ensued. They were friendly boos though, we’re a small community here. Simon will have to pay some beer next time. I mean he has to show the good example and be the first to be punished for infringing the rules he probably set himself. How else are we going to convince Mat to pay his beer otherwise?
Simon proceeded, but the final test before completely reassembling the device failed.
Phew! We would have been in for a big surprise with a demonstrated violation of the arrow of time, but…
But… were we really safe? Strange things were happening in the SAT, as a wall clock behind the bar was turning backwards while Simon reassured the audience that he would get the demo unit working at the end of DemoCampMontreal3!
Still, at the end of his presentation, there was applause (with airs of “I told you so” and “let’s taste some other wine”), despite the failure.
Quizzed as to what could be the cause of failure of the demo of the polemical technology, Simon had this to say:
“Er, I think it could be the searing heat of the S.A.T. spotlights reflecting on my glasses which damaged the clock’s delicate mechanism. It’s delicate you know…like… CLOCKWORK! HAHAHAHAHA!!”
Fellow member of the Montreal Tech community, Hugh McGuire, a stalwart believer of the prevailing laws, shared this observation through a Twitter post:
“I believe Simon really saw what he says he saw, but I’m afraid this might be a case of prolonged self-delusion.”
Subsequently, Simon suffered some backlash from Engadget which had previously blogged enthusiastically about his demonstration. Fear not, insider sources have just revealed that a full-blown interview with Simon is also under way.
5. Jérôme Paradis – CharterWeb
Jérôme, whom I had the pleasure of meeting at YULbiz (the meeting of business bloggers in Montreal), was at his first attendance of DemoCampMontreal, and he was presenting. That’s quite a feat! He presented a project codenamed CharterWeb, which he built in collaboration with François Aubin, of Cognitive Group, who couldn’t attend.
CharterWeb is a Web 2.0 application built for V1 Jets to enable the discovery and reservation of Jets. The application relies on Google Maps to display the maps as well as the draggable routes for each Jet. In addition, the app. can show the relevant details about each Jet and flight. There is a possibility of browsing through different available flights on different days so that should you be unsatisfied with the actual routes and schedules, you can find a similar one easily.
CharterWeb also incorporates the capacity to detect important information within emails through a recognition algorithm, and then interface that with the online application.
Having talked extensively with Jérôme last time, I guess he used Microsoft .Net to build part of the application.
Thanks to Sponsors
Simon took some time to thanks the sponsors of the event: Akoha, Standout Jobs, Garage Technology Ventures Canada, and the S.A.T., our hosts.
Thanks for the wine as well, Vinismo team.
As a grand finale, Simon demonstrated the cheap wall-clock running backwards! The arrow of time was successfully reversed and therefore, all of the DemoCampMontreal3 attendants were youthful again. Or maybe it was the resveratrol.
It was great to meet with Mat Balez, Adrien, Chris Scott and Pierre Phaneuf (the power of Facebook!), Carl Mercier, Kim Vallée, Amélie Racine, Mark, Philippe Chrun, Angelo, Fred, Julie, Simon, Tamu, Roberto Rocha, Alok Mohindra, Martin Dufort, Sébastien Paquet, and others.