Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Software Technology

Notacon: Geeks, Community, and Technology 21

jgoeke writes "I attended Notacon last year and was impressed how cool it was for a first-year event. This year the organizers seem to be outdoing themselves and have quite an impressive speaker list, including Fark.com's Drew Curtis, Richard Thieme and CSS guru Eric Meyer. Presentation topics range from community radio to network security to MUDs. For events, the 'Anything but Ethernet' contest looks equally promising (essentially, create the most convolunted network set-up you can NOT using Ethernet). Notacon runs from April 8th through the 10th, so thankfully there's plenty of time for me to put it on my calendar!"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Notacon: Geeks, Community, and Technology

Comments Filter:
  • (essentially, create the most convolunted network set-up you can NOT using Ethernet).

    Can you say "Carrier Pigeons [ietf.org]"?

    • by dolphinling ( 720774 ) on Monday February 21, 2005 @09:59PM (#11741413) Homepage Journal

      Replying to myself now that I've read the article... (w00t, first and second posts, and they're both ontopic!)

      Slowest: No artificial slowdowns allowed! Scrounge up the most decrepit, pathetic, but awesome-in-its-heyday gear you can find. 300 baud modems are a good starting point, but never underestimate the possibilities of paper tape streaming between the punch and the reader. Scoring in this category is purely at the judges' discretion, and coolness points will be awarded for anything involving Morse code, acoustic couplers, or tin cans. Input and output need not be computerized. (A daisywheel printout of the transmission is fine.)

      This one seems really easy: Feed the data to the pigeons, and wait for... um... digestion.

  • Radio broadcast (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Cthefuture ( 665326 ) on Monday February 21, 2005 @10:26PM (#11741557)
    Jason Scott (BBS Documentary) announced his Notacon radio project. It is, as he classifies it, "63 hours of who the hell knows" and will run the entirety of Notacon.

    It would be totally excellent if they would broadcast some or all of the speakers. I can't attend the event but I would love to listen in.

    It's all about community, right? Let everyone hear the speakers. ;)
  • Submission (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 21, 2005 @10:35PM (#11741596)
    "(essentially, create the most convolunted network set-up you can NOT using Ethernet)
    • Ever try to make sense of anything on the UPN network? I'd say that's about as convoluted as it gets.
  • They mentioned both of these in the article, I think combining them might work well.

    Get a couple of tin cans with an acoustic coupler in each one. Have some good wire between them for transmitting the information. I don't think normal string would work well since the volume drop would be a bit much but maybe some thin steel cable or something like that would give better results.

    I dunno really, but something like that would be a really cool way to reuse old gear
    • that's what I thought of too, but it would be soooooo much better if you displayed the data, and had a guy at each end, one saying one, zero, zero, one.... and the other typing it in.
      • Or you can maybe use morse code :)

        Tap out the morse code on the tin can and the other guy then has to decode it and type out the message
      • that's what I thought of too, but it would be soooooo much better if you displayed the data, and had a guy at each end, one saying one, zero, zero, one.... and the other typing it in.

        And of course, the guy listening to this on the other end, will morse 0 or 1 with a flashlight to someone on a mountain that will in turn use semaphore flags to relay them to a guy that will throw pies at either a man or a woman (depending on zero or one). A blindfolded guy will listen to the them and put zeros or ones down o

    • Normal string should work fine, it's the membranes on each end that you want to improve. Tin cans only resonate on a narrow band of frequencies. Paper cups are a good start.

      Anyway, you've suggested a good first hop, but what do you do with the data once it comes out over the other coupler's serial port? I know you've got some old Lantronix rs232-over-token-ring gear sitting around, don't you?

      Now keep going..

      (BTW, I'm planning a "jam session" after the contest judging, where everyone can graft their entri
  • How much beer will Drew consume? There isn't an official over/under, but IIRC the headline announcing his appearance at Notacon had something about the hotel bar needing to quadruple its usual keg count.

  • Don't forget Penguicon [penguicon.org] in Novi, MI (near Detroit. It's a Linux/Sci-Fi con that's just a whole lot of fun with plenty of games, celebrities, panels, parties, and so on. Check it out if you're in the midwest.
  • Notacon is not notcon [notcon04.com].
  • I'll also be speaking in case anyone wants to see lil ol' me! I've never actually met Drew, or been to Cleveland. I'm definitely looking forward to this.

"Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." -- Albert Einstein

Working...