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The Magic of the Sea

Order a vial of genuine Nova Scotia ocean water collected from beautiful Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia.

Price: $10.00

The utexas GProlog port of AM

Doug Lenat's AM program was created to produce automated deductions that might be considered "interesting."

Price: $1.00

Custom Windows Applications

I can build Windows applications with graphical user interfaces. Contact me for your own custom video game, record keeping or simulation software.

Ask about my competitive rates, or buy a few hours of my services through the site's shopping cart.

Price: $20.00

Cargo Containers

Order your own used 40' ISO Cargo Container online!

Price: $6,400.00

Concrete Seagull, Painted

A friendly reminder of the ocean. Purchase this beautiful painted seagull and pier ornament for your yard, or inside your house!

Shown in detail finish. Includes pier piling, seagull statue, maintenance instructions. Units are handpainted and may vary slightly from picture.

Features:

  • Detachable from pier piling
  • Available unpainted at no additional cost
  • Perfect for driveway markers
  • Shipping included in price to Canada and United States
 
Price: $512.00

A port of AM to a real language

I'm willing to port AM from Prolog, the industry standard Dynamic Algorithm Obfuscation System of the 1970s, into Python, Ruby, Java or C++, if I get enough people interested. Lay up $20 and you'll get a copy of the finished product once it's done, under a Creative Commons license.

Note that I live in North America, and I work as a programmer already, and expect to work on this to the tune of $20/hour.

Price: $20.00

Make Money Online!

I will show you how to make money online! The secret is so incredibly simple, a child could do it. All you have to do is

Price: $100.00

Lenat's AM, Reimplemented

Some University of Texas Professor decided to implement Doug Lenat's Automated Mathematician program in Prolog.

Source code here: http://github.com/akkartik/am-utexas/tree/master

I found it on a thread about reimplementing Eurisko: http://lesswrong.com/lw/10g/lets_reimplement_eurisko/

The interesting links with practical information and empirical data showed up pretty quickly, but then the local webmaster started thread-jacking and having his standard, tired, one-sided cocktail conversation.

Somehow, some signal still managed to shine through all that static.

whatiwant is gone!

If you want to use a site like whatiwant, where you can play twenty questions in order to find sites and ideas, you should try http://hunch.com . That's the one which had to go get millions of dollars in venture capital in order to make a twenty-questions site. Mine took a long weekend, and ten bucks in canned caffiene, and about forty bucks in Google AdWords.

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