Building 3
Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008After considering my options, I turned down an offer to work for the British Civil Service as a Technologist to pursue an opportunity at Hewlett-Packard Labs as a Research Intern in Bristol, England. I joined the Web Services & Systems Laboratory at HP Labs in September 2007 to work on Digital Repository research and development.
I have been part of a team researching and developing a recommender system for the DSpace digital repository system. Our approach is to extract terms from the stored items and the metadata associated with the items and use the terms to perform a comparison between a pair of items to determine if a recommendation is appropriate. Our work has been exploratory and proof-of-concept.
On 3rd April 2008, we delivered a presentation to approximately 100 delegates at the Open Repositories 2008 DSpace User Group in Southampton, England. On 21st April 2008, we published a technical report through the HP Labs Library detailing the first phase of our work.
I’m rather enjoying my time at HP Labs, there are plenty of interesting projects and a wide variety of extra-curricular activities. For example, the HP Labs Science Lectures are a series of evening events to promote the breadth and depth of science to the public. In January, we were entertained by Mike Edmunds of Cardiff University and his presentation of the work-in-progress discovery of the Antikythera Mechanism. This week, Herbert Huppert from Cambridge University will deliver a lecture on Extreme Natural Disasters and I’m looking forward it!
Finally, I liked Apple’s Think Different corporate culture advertising campaign and was pleased to find a dusty old poster in Building 3 of a corporate culture advertising campaign from HP. I think these rules offer an interesting way to think about your new career, regardless of profession.
