UCC Open Day

March 25th, 2006

Despite having just two hours sleep last night, today was very enjoyable thanks to the fourth year projects on display at the UCC Computer Science Open Day.

My own project was an Ad-hoc Network Management System, designing and implementing a protocol for wireless ad-hoc networks, independent of IP, with a service-oriented naming scheme. As wireless-enabled devices continue to get smaller and more numerous, IP routing cannot meet the future requirements of ad-hoc networks. My protocol is an alternative to IP. It reduces processing and memory overhead by eliminating the costly updating of routing tables, the large packet headers, the address conflicts, and the unnecessary restrictions that IP routing brings to an ad-hoc network. The service-oriented naming scheme introduces a whole new host of improvements and possibilities for the future, although at the moment I have only its most basic implementation.

The guy in front of me had an interesting project, 17,000 lines of code examining the algorithmic composition of music. When I was greeted by midi music at 9am, I thought I would be in for a long day. Turned out it was quite the opposite - he had really done his research and the results were amazing. The program used random numbers to generate a unique tune within the constraints of an algorithm which conforms to our idea of what good music is. There were loads of different controls to vary the output, but even some of the computer’s own work was really good. One tune in particular which used a slow, bluesy rhythm could easily have been a movie sound track. Even if you’re an AI skeptic who believes that a computer could never generate genuinely good music, there is no doubting that this tool could be a source of inspiration for artists, or a powerful background music generator for games, for example. The author of the project is looking to do a PHD, so it is in safe hands and it is possible that we could be seeing more of it in the future.

Music and Artificial Intelligence were also central to Mood Musik, a Java based music player which recommended songs to the user based not only on musical patterns (as some existing mp3 players can do) but also by analysing lyrical content.

There were several robotics projects. As far as I could tell, one such project involved a wheeled robot navigating his way through a red-brick maze. Maybe I got the idea wrong, but robots are always cool anyway.

Games development was big this year, with most of the guys that were at Intel with me taking this option. One group made a PC game, another made an Xbox game, and a third group who developed a PS2 game (although I did not get to see that one).

Homer SimpsonThe multiplayer PC game looked like Quake and felt like Unreal. Perfectly rendered machinegun with realistic sounds, and great graphics except for the disproportionate enemy models that provided comic effect akin to using the ‘homer simpson’ model in Half-life Deathmatch and Quake 3.

The Xbox game, called ‘Revelation’ had a religious theme. You are are monk who runs around banishing demons, in the true spirit of oldschool classic FPS games. A great theme and atmosphere, with a first rate introduction (the holy tome opening with a freaky otherwordly narration).

These projects were really inspirational - the things you can do in just a couple of months if you put your mind to it. Revelation inspired me to go straight to GAME and buy Oblivion, which was released today. So I braved the Friday evening South Ring traffic to Mahon Point. And by the time I got there, they were sold out. I’ve never seen this happen before… I bought Halflife 2 the day it came out, at 8pm in the evening. I bought World of Warcraft the day it came out… and Doom 3, and Quake 4. None of these came close to selling out on their opening day.
I rang GameStop in Blackpool and asked if they had it in stock.

Norry: “Yeah we have that, no bother.”
Me: “Should I reserve it? Like, is there any danger of it selling out between now and the time I get there?”
Norry: “Nah we have loads of copies.”

So I braved the Friday evening North Ring traffic to Blackpool. They had one copy left when I got there.

One Response to “UCC Open Day”

  1. How Many Of These Will Get VC? at Dave’s Rants Says:

    […] In the US at the moment, and in general, you can’t turn around if you have an idea without getting Venture Capital. The question is though, how many of the interesting things James mentions will get help? […]

Leave a Reply

I am from Cork, Ireland. A fan of the Big Lebowski, Mac OS X, Linux, Cork hurling, Munster rugby, Irish football. Interests include QuakeWorld, Python (lately Django), network security, web applications and technology in general.

Leave a comment if you come across something that interests you. My contact details are here. Alternatively, you can connect on LinkedIn or Twitter.