Reply by Stephan M. Bernsee●November 29, 20042004-11-29
On 2004-11-29 10:52:51 +0100, Steve Underwood <steveu@dis.org> said:
> Maybe he just liked to foster an air of mystery. Also, not every
> Stephen particularly likes being Stephen.
>
> Regards,
> Steve (and definitely not Stephen :-) )
Yeah maybe :-)
Regards,
Stephan (also definitely not Stephen)!
--
Stephan M. Bernsee
http://www.dspdimension.com
Reply by Steve Underwood●November 29, 20042004-11-29
Stephan M. Bernsee wrote:
> On 2004-11-28 21:54:08 +0100, Mark Borgerding <mark@borgerding.net> said:
>
>> wikipedia says:
>>
>>
>> ... first described by the British engineer S. Butterworth, (who
>> specifically refused to publish his first name; it is thought to be
>> Stephen) in his paper "On the Theory of Filter Amplifiers", Wireless
>> Engineer (also called Experimental Wireless and the Radio Engineer),
>> vol. 7, 1930, pp. 536-541.
>
>
> Hm, if his name was really Stephen, why not publish it? My guess is it
> was something more exotic (or maybe female?)
>
> :-)
Maybe he just liked to foster an air of mystery. Also, not every Stephen
particularly likes being Stephen.
Regards,
Steve (and definitely not Stephen :-) )
Reply by Stephan M. Bernsee●November 29, 20042004-11-29
On 2004-11-28 21:54:08 +0100, Mark Borgerding <mark@borgerding.net> said:
> wikipedia says:
>
>
> ... first described by the British engineer S. Butterworth, (who
> specifically refused to publish his first name; it is thought to be
> Stephen) in his paper "On the Theory of Filter Amplifiers", Wireless
> Engineer (also called Experimental Wireless and the Radio Engineer),
> vol. 7, 1930, pp. 536-541.
Hm, if his name was really Stephen, why not publish it? My guess is it
was something more exotic (or maybe female?)
:-)
--
Stephan M. Bernsee
http://www.dspdimension.com
Reply by ●November 28, 20042004-11-28
"Robert Rozman" <rozman@fri.uni-lj.si> writes:
> I'm trying to dig some more info about Butterworth guy, that certaing group
> of IIR filters are named after. There are a lot of Butterworths in the
> history, so I'm curious which one is right...
Reply by Mark Borgerding●November 28, 20042004-11-28
Robert Rozman wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to dig some more info about Butterworth guy, that certaing group
> of IIR filters are named after. There are a lot of Butterworths in the
> history, so I'm curious which one is right...
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> regards,
>
> Robert.
>
>
wikipedia says:
... first described by the British engineer S. Butterworth, (who
specifically refused to publish his first name; it is thought to be
Stephen) in his paper "On the Theory of Filter Amplifiers", Wireless
Engineer (also called Experimental Wireless and the Radio Engineer),
vol. 7, 1930, pp. 536-541.
Reply by Robert Rozman●November 28, 20042004-11-28
Hi,
I'm trying to dig some more info about Butterworth guy, that certaing group
of IIR filters are named after. There are a lot of Butterworths in the
history, so I'm curious which one is right...
Thanks in advance,
regards,
Robert.