Have you ever paid any open source developers for the work we do?
Yes.
Are you writing and publishing any code yourself?
Yes.
http://www.dialectronics.com/Also, for Raptor-specific aspects, please see
https://wiki.raptorcs.com/wiki/Installing_Big-endian_FreeBSDhttps://wiki.raptorcs.com/wiki/From_QEMU_to_BigEndian_FreeBSDhttps://wiki.raptorcs.com/wiki/SMT_profiling_with_Debian_and_perfPlus my threads on trying to port the firmware for Raptor systems to other platforms.
https://forums.raptorcs.com/index.php/topic,632.0.html
Or you only contribute medical advice?
I do a lot of research into medical issues, as part of personal and professional interests. I combine computational efforts with medical analysis. You can see some of my computational efforts at
http://dm.mpjanson.org:8100/You might want to brush up on compartmental models of infectious diseases, particularly vector-host models, before using the tool. However, for a quick and simple demonstration, select SISIR and SEISIR, then select Time (should already be selected), and then select Infected vectors.
You will get a real-time generated output, and you can change the parameters on the left and get images in real-time (not stored). The computational platform is a Udoo x86 Advanced SBC, consuming 12 watts, running Minix 3.1.6, which I ported to the Udoo x86 after building my own toolchain with pcc and yasm, plus my own code to shim between yasm's XDF object file output and Minix's ACK linker. The images are generated with libjpeg. I haven't published the disease modeling code, which I wrote using Sundials from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories (which I also ported to Minix). I am 100% BSD/MIT-licensed (0% GPL code). If I see someone with a genuine interest in this effort, I will provide the source code, but I won't respond to your immediate demand that I do so as proof of my sincerity.
Now, Daniel, do you spent any time contributing to open source efforts in a manner that does not seek to tear down what others have created?