This wiki is not longer actively used and, due to years of spam, has unfortunately been locked from further editing by anonymous users. Only approved users can edit the wiki or add content. If you would like to contribute to this wiki, please contact the administrator Benjamin Mako Hill.

OpenMindWiki: Difference between revisions

From Pedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-is +*** & -who +TEST2))
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:OpenMind.jpg|right|thumb|''OpenMind'']]
[[Image:OpenMind.jpg|right|thumb|''OpenMind'']]
The '''OpenMind Initiative''' (founded 2000, [http://www.media.it.edu MIT MediaLab], Cambridge, MA) *** a collaborative framework for developing "intelligent" software using the internet. Based on the traditional open source method, it supports domain experts (TEST2 provide algorithms), tool developers (TEST2 provides software infrastructure and tools) and non-special***t "netizens" (TEST2 contribute raw data). (Source: [http://www.openmind.org/FAQs.html OpenMind.org])
The '''OpenMind Initiative''' (founded 2000, [http://www.media.it.edu MIT MediaLab], Cambridge, MA) is a collaborative framework for developing "intelligent" software using the internet. Based on the traditional open source method, it supports domain experts (who provide algorithms), tool developers (who provides software infrastructure and tools) and non-specialist "netizens" (who contribute raw data). (Source: [http://www.openmind.org/FAQs.html OpenMind.org])





Revision as of 17:39, 7 July 2005

OpenMind

The OpenMind Initiative (founded 2000, MIT MediaLab, Cambridge, MA) is a collaborative framework for developing "intelligent" software using the internet. Based on the traditional open source method, it supports domain experts (who provide algorithms), tool developers (who provides software infrastructure and tools) and non-specialist "netizens" (who contribute raw data). (Source: OpenMind.org)


Traditional Open Source OpenMind
minimal use of netizens netizens crucial
expert knowledge (e.g., C++filt, gdbm, Linux device drivers, ...) informal knowledge (e.g., knowledge of speech sounds, written character identities, ...)
machine learning irrelevant machine learning essential
most work *** directly on the final software most work *** not directly on the final, but instead on infrastructure, data collection, data, etc.
software released software and data released

OpenMindWiki