Reply by Bernhard Holzmayer September 13, 20042004-09-13
Stephan M. Bernsee wrote:

>> http://139.134.5.123/tiddler2/fbt/fbt.htm > > That web page sucks - no way I'll give away my email address to a > web page that I'm visiting. Who knows if I will be the one who > gets spammed after that? And having to turn JavaScript off > explicitely is a bit too much to ask from a visitor. Since most > email collecting bots don't process JavaScript this is quite > useless anyway... > > Try http://www.monkeys.com for a viable alternative. > Stephan M. Bernseehttp://www.dspdimension.com >
Thanks for this comment. I agree. Bernhard
Reply by Stephan M. Bernsee September 10, 20042004-09-10
On 2004-09-08 17:25:35 +0200, gooday@hotvoice.com (tontoko hirorin) said:

> Although analysing signals with Wavelet has the benefit of > localization, the functions used for Wavelet are a bit complicated. > Don't you think so?
It depends on what you think is complicated...
> Using the complete function system simpler than that of Wavelet > introduced in the following webpage: > > http://139.134.5.123/tiddler2/fbt/fbt.htm
That web page sucks - no way I'll give away my email address to a web page that I'm visiting. Who knows if I will be the one who gets spammed after that? And having to turn JavaScript off explicitely is a bit too much to ask from a visitor. Since most email collecting bots don't process JavaScript this is quite useless anyway... Try http://www.monkeys.com for a viable alternative. -- Stephan M. Bernsee http://www.dspdimension.com
Reply by tontoko hirorin September 8, 20042004-09-08
Although analysing signals with Wavelet has the benefit of
localization, the functions used for Wavelet are a bit complicated.
Don't you think so?
Using the complete function system simpler than that of Wavelet
introduced in the following webpage:

http://139.134.5.123/tiddler2/fbt/fbt.htm

the software: FBT can carry out spectral analysis in the order of O(n)
where n is the number of sampling data. The minimum sapling interval
is 50 micro sec. The hardware used for it has been developed based on
Graham Cattley's "Pocket Sampler" published on Electronics Australia
in August 1996 and is completely compatible with DATAKit #80-112 (for
the detail of DATAKit #80-112.