Shane Hegde's Page

Profile Information

I am...
undergraduate
Type of participation
Regular (weekly or biweekly meetings)
University/School/Institution
Stanford University
School or Department (if applicable)
Science, Technology, & Society
Research or personal interests
Technology, Web 2.0, College Football
Month and year of birth
December 1990

Shane Hegde's Blog

Fadoodle - Final Blog Post

Posted on March 17, 2012 at 9:30pm 0 Comments



What's Fadoodle?

Visual and tactile learners need a more engaging platform than pencil and paper.  Fadoodles helps students build words before their eyes in an interactive learning environment for…

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Fabrication Tip - Tuio Recognition

Posted on March 17, 2012 at 8:00pm 0 Comments

1} Please see the first code to read through how I referenced the library of english words. The lexicon was downloaded from the internet and can be found easily on google

2)Please see the below code if you had questions as to my recognition software in java. I wrote it as simply as I could and it traces through the recognition, reference, and projection. 

void readFile() {

try {

BufferedReader reader = new…

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Fabrication Tip - Painting on Acrylic Rastor

Posted on March 17, 2012 at 8:00pm 0 Comments

USE A ACRYLIC SQUEEGEE (or a squeegee of some sorts)!

The key is to stay away from towels or cloth that are really porous. These can fit into the groves of the rastoring and will take away the paint. Using other tools to scrape away a layer of paint may also scratch the acrylic with paint so this is not a viable alternative. 

 

Fabrication Tip - Vector Cutting Wood

Posted on March 17, 2012 at 8:00pm 0 Comments

USE LOW A LOWER POWER AND GO OVER THE MATERIAL MULTIPLE TIMES

I have experimented a lot with the numbers but it all depends on the type of wood and thickness. In general, you should stay patient and not open the machine to see if the cut went all the way through. The problem with this is that you will mess up the alignment and wont be able to cut the material in the same spot again. My suggestion, therefore, is to print the cut and re-print until you can see that the cut out…

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