Every rabbit is unique. Each has a name. It responds to commands. It replies. It moves. It alerts. It relays. It sings: songs from friends. It plays radio: any station, across the Web. It reads: texts, messages, mail, news, feeds. It Twitters. They're telepathic.
I wish i could write arbitrary scripts for things Violet could not have imagined, then play them improv with Mozilla Ubiquity. I wish Nabaztag had an open architecture, not one locked into paid premiums.
May 13bindu - This sound extremely neat. Has anyone actually bought one of these? The rabbit connects to the internet and than alerts you about email/news etc.
bunny1 - I am not too good on computers but I will try,,,Bindy you are so nice !!!...I am leaving tomorrow for the Bahmas,,might be off for awhile,,,,
jlam - Bindu, upon seeing a photo of this toy rabbit, i might not have noticed its significance, had Ana not posted a photo looking for an ear after a Friendfeed open house. Kevin has one there.
bindu - Ah I now remember Ana's post on it. I checked out the price last night. Not bad for $99
jsg - They are pretty fun. The company also has little RFID bunnies that are actually useful too. They are called violet mir:ror.
Unlike NetFlix or Amazon—though they protect user privacy, ultimately they serve private interests—Movielens serves as a collaborative filtering platform for the Groups Lens research team at the University of Minnesota. Because they've accepted National Science Foundation grants for a large portion of their research, they must also abide by its participant research guidelines. In addition, they also must adhere to University of Minnesota Board of Regents participant research guidelines.
Mar 7
This collection of about 60 published papers about collaborative filtering gives an in-depth and comprehensive overview of its subject.
Mar 7


