Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Programming

Congress Mulls API For Congressional Data 121

Amerika sends in a Wired blog post on the desire in Congress to make data on lawmaking more easily available to the public. The senator who introduced the language into an omnibus appropriations bill wants feedback on the best way to make (e.g.) the Library of Congress's Thomas data more available — an API or bulk downloads, or both. Some comments on the blog posting call for an authenticated versioning system so we can know unequivocally how any particular language made its way into a bill. "Congress has apparently listened to the public's complaints about lack of convenient access to government data. The new Omnibus Appropriations Bill includes a section, introduced by Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.), that would mark the first tangible move toward making federal legislative data available to the public in bulk, so third parties can mash it up and redistribute it in innovative and accessible ways. This would include all the data currently distributed through the Library of Congress's Thomas web site — bill status and summary information, lists of sponsors, tracking timelines, voting records, etc."
Censorship

Submission + - Oklahoma State Lawmakers Silence Darwinian Speaker

nizcolas writes: Notable evolutionary biologist, author and speaker Richard Dawkins, was recently invited to speak on the campus of the University of Oklahoma as part of the school's celebration of Charles Darwin. However, Oklahoma lawmakers are working to silence Dawkins with the passage of House Bill 1015 which reads in part: "...the University of Oklahoma, [...] has invited as a public speaker on campus, Richard Dawkins of Oxford University, whose published opinions, as represented in his 2006 book "The God Delusion", and public statements on the theory of evolution demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking and are views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma..."
Pending legal action, Dawkins is set to speak tonight at 7 p.m.
Editorial

Submission + - Dreamweaver is dying. Long live Drupal. (pcpro.co.uk)

Barence writes: "Here's an interesting blog post by a designer who reckons Dreamweaver is dying. It's not Dreamweaver's fault, though. Nor is the problem Adobe and its development team — the last Dreamweaver CS4 version was the most impressive release in years. Moreover, although Microsoft Expression Web poses a far more credible threat than FrontPage could muster, Dreamweaver remains the best HTML/CSS page-based editor available. The real problem for Dreamweaver and for its users is that the nature of the web is changing dramatically."

Comment We used Lego at OrionRobots (Score 1) 136

Our club went pretty well when it was in full swing in the summer of 2005. We used Lego almost exclusively - with the RCX for more complicated tasks, or a SpyBotix and two Manas units for simpler RC robots.

The kids learned basic stuff like building strong structures, mechanical linkages, getting more than one action from a single motor, as well as teamwork and planning.

The format was to do a challenge, then give some theory that would enable them to do the same challenge better, and let them try it again. That way, the theory is relevant.

I also used some flat MDF, spray painted black, with Yellow Hazard taped borders to lay out arenas for RC bots - where the challenges were different - build something for speed, build one for control, build one that can get over the gap, build sumo bots. Black painted MDF with Yellow hazard borders looks like robot wars so they were really thrilled.

We did not participate in FLL, but I did try to get the kids to build a Great Ball Contraption - which was their largest group project.

OrionRobots now owns an NXT too, but is not currently running a club, perhaps I will again later, but for now I have my own kid on the way.

Comment Probably until download speeds reach 100Mb (Score 1) 478

Which from what I understand, may be only a few months away. Sure, there will still be some on the shelves, traditional console or handheld games, but the PC games market will be very much download centric, and the consoles will rapidly move that way too. I say give it a year or two, and the shelves may have the stragglers, or boxed stubs with a single URL on a CD but the mainstream will be downloaded.

Slashdot Top Deals

I had the rare misfortune of being one of the first people to try and implement a PL/1 compiler. -- T. Cheatham

Working...