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Zoran Jeremic is a PhD now

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It is a great pleasure to annonce that since November 10, 2009, we have another PhD in our network - Zoran Jeremic has successfully and brilliantly defended his PhD thesis, Collaborative Learning Using Semantic Web Technologies. Congratulations, Zoran!

Neuroph 2.3 - Image Recognition has been released

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Neuroph v2.3 - Image Recognition has been released! The most exciting feature of this relase is image recognition support which provides GUI tool for training multi layer perceptrons for image recognition, and easy to use API to deploy these networks in the end-user applications.  With this library you can perform image recognition in just few lines of code.  Check out this image recognition howto to see it in action.
 

The Best Student Award Goes To Uros

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We are proud to announce that the University of Belgrade just awarded Uros Krcadinac the Official Award for the Best Student of his Generation at the Faculty of Organization Sciences (School of Business Administration).

Neuroph in Sun Technology News

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The recent interview about the Neuroph project published in the Developers Zone got listed on Sun's site Technology News section. It is also highlited in the Notable NetBeans News. We are getting many downloads and usefull feedback info from our users. This is a big push for the Neuroph community to grow, and at the moment we are preparing some exciting new features for the next release.

Neuroph Interview on DZone

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A two-part interview entitled Neuroph: Smart Java Apps with Neural Networks has been published on NetBeans Zone, a popular social network for developers. Take a look at part 1 and part 2 and and get to know the Neuroph project behind the scene, as well as our future plans. Part two of the interview also contains a very brief howt-o for the Neuroph GUI.

 Read more about the Neuroph project here, or contact Zoran Sevarac.

64 Kilometer Long GOOD OLD AI GPS Drawing: The Symbol of Research As Big As Paris!

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By cycling and walking through Paris, with a GPS receiver as a pencil, Uros Krcadinac has drown a 64 kilometer long logo of the GOOD OLD AI Research Network!

It shows how our footsteps, as meaningless as they might seem on the ground, can turn into a fantastic visual pattern understandable only from the sky perspective, making this modern geoglyph a giant symbol of research.

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