Comienza el X Concurso Universitario de Software Libre

X Concurso Software Libre

X Concurso Software Libre

Este mismo domingo comenzará la X Edición del Concurso Universitario de Software Libre, un concurso en el que el Software Libre reina de manera amplia. El concurso universitario de Software Libre comienza desde hace diez años con el curso escolar y se desarrolla durante éste.

Los participantes pueden ser alumnos de las universidades españolas, pero también alumnos de ciclos de formación profesional así como los alumnos de bachillerato. El único requisito para poder inscribirse es que el participante debe estar inscrito en un centro educativo español.

Este concurso tiene ya diez ediciones a su espalda donde ya participan más de 1.200 alumnos con más de 840 proyectos de Software Libre. A lo largo de estos diez años, este concurso ha repartido más de 50.000 euros en premios y desarrollo de los proyectos que se crean.

El X Concurso Universitario de Software Libre durará todo el curso 2015-16

Para aquellos que quieran participar, el proceso es muy sencillo. A partir de este domingo, día 20 de septiembre, se abrirá el plazo de inscripción hasta el día 15 de noviembre de este mismo año. Desde la confirmación de la participación hasta la fase de evaluación, cada equipo o desarrollador tiene tiempo para crear su proyecto. La fase de evaluación comenzará el 1 de abril al 15 de abril del 2016. En mayo del 2016 comenzará la fase final donde se dará a conocer a los finalistas. Aquellos que quieran participar o que les haya gustado lo que han leído, en este enlace tenéis el formulario de inscripción así como el contacto con los organizadores para conocer más o simplemente para saber de proyectos que hayan salido de este concurso.

Personalmente creo que estas iniciativas son muy positivas, no sólo porque se promueve el Software Libre sino porque se crea nuevo Software Libre e incluso se ayuda a que estos proyectos despeguen con los menores problemas posibles. Os mantendremos informados sobre el resultado del X Concurso Universitario de Software Libre, esperando que en esta edición el número de participantes y proyectos aumente considerablemente.

El artículo Comienza el X Concurso Universitario de Software Libre ha sido originalmente publicado en Linux Adictos.

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Stephen Colbert, CNBC And The Entertainment Of Business News

We’re only one week into the reign of Stephen Colbert as host of CBS’s The Late Show, and it’s no shock that the ageless (or perhaps aged) late-night format is still very much in evidence. You’ve got your opening monologue (not a Colbert strength), your fancy desk, your peppy in-house band, and your late program musical guest. Check, check, check and check.

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Metal Gear Solid 5’s Biggest Secret Is Totally Insane

It seems like there’s a message about nuclear disarmament hidden in Metal Gear Solid 5. This is of course, no shocker: the Metal Gear series is lousy with pontification on nuclear war and more or less anything else one is capable of pontificating on, but the way that this particular message is conveyed is really what’s interesting about it. It’s probably the biggest secret in a game packed with them, and nobody may ever see it in the game itself.

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‘Destiny:’ Xur Works A Little Differently In ‘The Taken King’

Everybody’s favorite exotic weapon merchant is back for year two of Destiny, but he’s not quite like you might remember him. In year one, you could rely on him to provide one weapon, one piece of armor per class, and one random engram. He’s still selling one piece of armor per class, but the rest of the inventory is a bit different. He now sells either a specific exotic weapon or a random engram, as well as a “legacy engram” that will give you a weapon that won’t be particularly useful in year two, but will be a collector’s item for those interested in that sort of thing. He also sells a “three of coins,” a stackable consumable that increases the chances the next ultra you kill will drop an exotic engram. In addition, heavy weapon synthesis is down from 5 stacks to 3.

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Star Fox, Zelda And The Wii U’s Lost Year

This past April, I wondered out loud about the chances of Star Fox actually managing to make it to the Wii U in 2015. We’d heard practically nothing about the game at that point, getting only a mere glimpse of it at E3 2014, and with Nintendo’s history of first party delays, it seemed like it would be tough to hit that holiday 2015 window with so little revealed so far.

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A back to school gift for your favorite geek: The Neo Smartpen N2

In a world with Google, where our searches and Google Docs can be transcribed from our speech, the necessity of typing or physically writing things down is diminishing rapidly. But there are countless situations where writing is still absolutely necessary. We can’t vocally take notes on our phones or computers during a lecture. We can’t always be typing our notes down on our phones in the middle of a meeting, it’s distracting and unacceptable. Also, some people just aren’t comfortable or have difficulty being understood by our listening mobile devices. Do these people just get left behind in our ever advancing world of technology? Absolutely not. Smartpens are the real deal and are here to bridge the gap between the pen and paper and digital storage and sharing.

The Pen

The Neo Smartpen N2 is NeoLAB’s smartpen solution for the world. It is the result of a successful Kickstarter campaign and is now available to anyone online. The N2 is simply a pen with a camera that watches and remembers or passes on what you’re writing to a mobile device. The camera watches at 120 frames per second and the pen can sense the pressure you’re using to write. To work, the N2 currently requires special paper with Ncode technology, paper with little tiny character patterns that tell the N2 and the companion app where and what page you’re writing on. It uses Bluetooth to connect with either Android or iOS.

Neo Smartpen N2-2
Neo Smartpen N2-4
Neo Smartpen N2-5
Neo Smartpen N2-6
Neo Smartpen N2-7
Neo Smartpen N2-8
Neo Smartpen N2-9
Neo Smartpen N2-10

Like any decent smart device, the Neo Smartpen N2 has hardware. Yeah, this pen has specs. Here they are:

CPU : Dual Core ARM9 Application Processor
Connectivity : USB 2.0 (Micro USB) / Bluetooth 4.0
Size : L 156mm / W 11.5 ~ 11.8 / 22g (Without pencap)
OS : Android Jelly Bean 4.1.2 or higher / iOS 7.1 or higher (iPhone 5 or higher)
Battery : Li-Polymer / 3.7V (Full charage : 2 hours)
Memory: 90MB Nand Flash
Display : Dot-LED Indicator (Full color)
Required Bluetooth Connectivity : Android Bluetooth 2.1 or higher / iOS Bluetooth 4.0 LE
Pen tip type : Standard D1 type
Usage time : Constant (5 hours) / Normal usage (3 days) / Standby (125 days)

The Experience

The Neo Smartpen N2 comes with a companion app that can be found in the Google Play Store, Neo Notes. Through the app you can “register”, or connect, your N2 with your device. It requires Android 4.1.2 or higher. When we first got the Smartpen, my wife was super stoked about it and tried to connect it with her Galaxy S6 and had trouble with pairing. After a few tries, she decided it might need to be charged first and we haven’t had any issues with pairing or connection since. My registering experience with the pen with my Nexus 6 went extremely smoothly. Since then, I have looked through the manual and it does suggest charging the pen before pairing.

Neo Smartpen N2-3

The N2 has a button on it that allows one to turn the pen on and off as well as pair the pen. It additionally has a full color LED light that tells you when it’s on, in pairing mode, and running low on battery. Once the pen is charged and on, using it is as easy as writing with a pen and paper. The pen has internal memory, so even if you’re not around your phone or not paired at any given time, the pen will store what you are writing so it can be transferred to your device and saved later. Neo states the pen can hold up to 1000 pages on A4 paper of offline writing.

Unfortunately the Neo Smartpen N2 requires special proprietary paper for the pen to work. In short, the N2 uses Ncode technology that is simply “a combination of lines and symbols printed so small they are difficult for the eye to perceive. Each line and symbol constitutes a pattern to express a unique code for each location on the page.” It’s really cool how well this technology works. The camera on the pen takes pictures or what you write and figures out where you wrote it from the Ncode. It even records the pressure of your stroke. If you have the pen connected to your phone, you can watch what you are writing immediately appear in your notebook in the Neo Notes companion app. The Smartpen and app even know when you’re using a different notebook and when you change pages. It just moves to the next page and doesn’t skip a beat.

Other than needing special paper, as a technology device, I haven’t been blown away with battery life or battery management for the N2. On the Neo Smartpen N2 website it states that the pen is able to auto-shutoff and there is a setting for that within the Neo Notes app, but I haven’t found that setting. So, I don’t know if my pen is currently auto-shutting off. And a lot of times when I go to use it if I haven’t been charging it, it’s not charged. Additionally, I just wish it had better battery life. It’s one more thing to have to worry about having charged and it would be nice if I felt like it didn’t need to be charged daily.

Other than battery life, the pen is super easy to use. My 4 and 6-year-old kids have gotten a kick out of the pen and have been drawing me pictures and writing me stories with it. Within the app, you can change the color and thickness of the strokes with what you are writing. A preschooler can do it, so can you.

Neo Smartpen N2-11

The feature that I think could be the most useful to me is transcribing. Being able to digitally store my hand written notes and easily share them is one thing. But the ability to transcribe and make my notes searchable sounds like it could have saved me lots of time in college. Heck, it could save me time now. I spend lots of time trying to find that one little thing I wrote down that one time. Searchable notes sound amazing. The transcribing didn’t handle bullet points that well, but I think it wouldn’t take long to get along great with the Neo Smartpen N2 and the transcribing feature in Neo Notes. You can also sync your notes with Evernote and Google Drive.

The Bottom Line

I already told you about the catch of the special paper. What about the price? Well, the Neo Smartpen N2 isn’t cheap. The N2 comes in two colors, Silver White (what we reviewed) and Titan Black, and will set you back $169. It’s available from neosmartpen.com or you can get free shipping in the US via Amazon. In addition to the pen, the special paper comes in several different varieties and the cost isn’t as bad as I imagined it could’ve been. For example, you can get a 5 pack of 100 ruled A4 paper pads for $21.90. It’s obviously more expensive that regular paper, but it’s not terrible. I haven’t personally used smartpen competitors like Equil and Livescribe, but the N2 seems very competitively priced for the smooth online and offline experience and features offered.

Overall, I’ve been impressed with the experience of the N2. The pen and app are super easy to use. After having the N2 for a couple of weeks, I don’t feel like a smartpen is something that I can’t live without. But if you think a smartpen would be amazing and a great fit in your schooling, business, or lifestyle I definitely think the N2 should be considered. It could even be a great gift for your hard working gadget loving college student because they probably can’t afford to buy it themselves.

What are your thoughts on the Neo Smartpen N2? What are you thoughts on smartpens in general? Do you think the N2 is missing any must-have features? Have an N2 and have thoughts you’d like to share on it? Let us know what you think by commenting below.

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Lights On, Profits Out? Why Energy Innovation Needs Enterprise Analytics

Cast your mind back to the early 2000s when the chatter amongst those in the energy industry most likely focused on ‘keeping the lights on’ in the face of a growing demand for power versus available generation. There would also have been some talk of saving the planet by lowering carbon emissions.

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