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Jason Jacobs
Bio [2006]
When Jason was six, his father told him that if you type the proper set of
instructions into a computer, it can do anything imaginable. Jason has
been hooked ever sense. In high school while most kids wore doing homework,
staying up late to date, and skipping school, Jason was not doing
homework, staying up programming his computer till 4 a.m., and skipping class
to get more time in the computer lab. Post high school, Jason went to work
moving up the programming ladder of various companies, and then also moved
into consulting. Today if you buy a bag of chips, have a managed
401(k)pension plan, get a title to a house, or if you simply buy gas,
more then likely you went through some of Jason's code.
Jason currently works for Retalix, a company that produces software
for the full range of retail industries, and he works for the Ante
Institute underneath the supervision of Mihai Nadin. Jason is also a
non-degree-seeking student at UTD, but he has been known to take
random junior college classes from welding to "The Social Impact of
Television."
Jason's interests include, but are not limited to, computers, music (Jason
plays guitar, bass, piano, recorder, and accordion), graphic design,
charcoal/graphite/pen drawing, whiteboard art, non-linear systems, fuzzy
logic, mountain biking, traveling, food/cooking, media studies, writing in
the third person, questioning authority, and most importantly anything
concerning fun.
Jason also has a website.
Project Title
Nursing, Growing, and Cultivating Data with Automata
Project
Substitution systems allow for complexity to grow yet are always a
reference to the initial states of the system. My hypothesis is that you
can build a synthesizer that depending on the speed of the note will
create subtle dynamics within each note. Each note produced within a scale
for a given substitution method will be related, yet have it's own
dynamics. This is much like an analog instrument (guitar, piano, tuba) has
different note dynamics for each note played.
In order to do this process I will take the beginning and end of a
sample, then create the dynamics for the middle of the sample based on
a substitution system similar to what we see on page 83 of A New
Kind of Science.
Favorite Four-Color, Radius-1/2 Rule
Rule chosen: 11122
I am a minimalist at heart. I wanted an automaton with symmetry and motion.
I see this, and I think Lohse.
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