I'm looking to officially hand off a few ruby projects to hackers capable of 
being more diligent about updates and responding to users than I. :-( 
 Source code for all these is on GitHub, though not all are public. I wish I 
had time for all these, but the users deserve better than I'm able to 
provide. Here's a breakdown of the projects waiting for your love:


*Miscellaneous projects:*

- *railroady*                     Ruby on Rails 3 model and controller UML 
class diagram generator. Originally based on the "railroad" plugin and 
contributions of many others. Currently working but has a few outstanding 
bugs. Seems somewhat popular I guess.
- *ruby-prolog*                 A simple Prolog DSL implementation written 
in ruby. As academic and stupid as it sounds, I actually have seen people 
using it in the wild and periodically get good questions about it outside of 
the compsci-y space. As long as you understand lambda calculus it's pretty 
easy to grok.
- *Starfield*                       Proof-of-concept 3D interactive 
star-field simulation written in pure Ruby packaged as an OSX .app. (Runs 
JRuby internally.) Hasn't been updated in a long time. Written to 
demonstrate that we (the Ruby community) *could* actually write and 
distribute Ruby .app's (for OSX) that do complex things like interactive 4D 
simulations.
- *Twiverse*                      95% same code as above but displays tweets 
instead. Hasn't been updated in a long time. Again... proof-of-concept only 
and very slow implementation.


*Kindle-related projects:*

- *kindle-drm*                PID and checksum finder for Kindle 2 and prior 
models. Probably needs updates for Kindle 3.
- *kindle-drm-stripper*    Unreleased ruby code developed for research 
purposes only that has not been released into the wild. Was written for 
Kindle 2 hardware. Needs updating for Kindle 3. You can probably guess what 
it does.
- *KindleTools*              Currently hosted at 
http://kindletools.prestonlee.com. Just a stupid rails web form frontend for 
the most common "kindle-drm" gem use case: finding a Kindle PID. Has been 
used by over 20,000 Kindle fans. DOES NOT PROVIDE AN INTERFACE FOR 
"kindle-drm-stripper" GEM for obvious reasons. Would be much better as a 
simple Sinatra app or something... rails is way overkill. I will hand over 
the code and perma-redirect to your new site, but not any of the logs or 
statistical data to project the users.


Please forward to other lists/colleagues that may be interested.

Preston

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