I’d appreciate it I’d you could share the former when you are done with it. A more general use of this setup might be tracking the effects of frequent actions. There would be some hangups here, but they are a bit inconvenient to discuss while typing oh my tablet.
As I mention in another comment, the data crunching is completely separate and likely to generate lots of specific datapoints that are only relevant to me. This is where things get really hard to generalize/make easy to use widely.
If this doesn’t scare you away, then send me a message.
Likely pre-requisites are:
Programming experience
Experience with Java
Willingness to set up a local database server (I use MySQL)
Familiarity with the various ways to use Bayes’s theorem (I recommend Bayesian Artificial Intelligence and of course, EY’s article) and how things can go wrong
It’s actually online already but I am not publicizing it right now for a few reasons:
It assumes only 1 user right now so there’s no encryption or data separation
No reporting features (this is also a security feature; can’t have an XSS with no displayed values!) except for downloading the database and connecting with Excel/ODBC/Your favorite data crunching tool
Assumes the Pacific Time Zone
HIPAA/the mess around dealing with personally identifiable information
Ideas for mitigating the issues are welcome as deploying the site is very easy:
Generate a random string of letters and numbers.
Make a folder on your LAMP server named after #1.
Copy and paste the application to the folder.
Change 1 value inside a config file to point at #1.
Run a script to create the databases.
Fill in your database login information inside a config file.
(This assumes that you’re wise enough to avoid leaving any public pointers to the site.)
I’d appreciate it I’d you could share the former when you are done with it. A more general use of this setup might be tracking the effects of frequent actions. There would be some hangups here, but they are a bit inconvenient to discuss while typing oh my tablet.
I would also appreciate it if you shared the web app. (I’ve got food problems all over the place, and I probably haven’t figured out all of them yet.)
(Just FYI, I don’t think Zian gets a notification unless you reply to his comment.)
You’re correct and thanks for posting that.
As I mention in another comment, the data crunching is completely separate and likely to generate lots of specific datapoints that are only relevant to me. This is where things get really hard to generalize/make easy to use widely.
If this doesn’t scare you away, then send me a message.
Likely pre-requisites are:
Programming experience
Experience with Java
Willingness to set up a local database server (I use MySQL)
Familiarity with the various ways to use Bayes’s theorem (I recommend Bayesian Artificial Intelligence and of course, EY’s article) and how things can go wrong
It’s actually online already but I am not publicizing it right now for a few reasons:
It assumes only 1 user right now so there’s no encryption or data separation
No reporting features (this is also a security feature; can’t have an XSS with no displayed values!) except for downloading the database and connecting with Excel/ODBC/Your favorite data crunching tool
Assumes the Pacific Time Zone
HIPAA/the mess around dealing with personally identifiable information
Ideas for mitigating the issues are welcome as deploying the site is very easy:
Generate a random string of letters and numbers.
Make a folder on your LAMP server named after #1.
Copy and paste the application to the folder.
Change 1 value inside a config file to point at #1.
Run a script to create the databases.
Fill in your database login information inside a config file.
(This assumes that you’re wise enough to avoid leaving any public pointers to the site.)