> As for the rest of us, we might just as well get used
> to it. This is what the future of academia is all about.
Scary.
--
% Randy Yates % "Ticket to the moon, flight leaves here today
%% Fuquay-Varina, NC % from Satellite 2"
%%% 919-577-9882 % 'Ticket To The Moon'
%%%% <yates@ieee.org> % *Time*, Electric Light Orchestra
http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr
Reply by Rune Allnor●June 5, 20072007-06-05
On 3 Jun, 16:10, R.Lyons@_BOGUS_ieee.org (Rick Lyons) wrote:
> Hi Guys,
...
> And this guy named Vista! He seems to be
> working on 8-10 different DSP problems and he
> seems unsure of how to even begin to resolve those
> problems. (And he's in a terrible hurry to
> receive solutions.) How could one guy, with only
> a small bit of DSP understanding, be required to
> solve so many different DSP problems in such a hurry?
Provided he is for real and not a troll, this is probably
an effect of the new eductaional system where everything
*except* for skills in the subjects taught is addressed
when hiring teaching staff in universities. The guy
obviously have recieved no training in the pertinent
diciplines before embarking on whatever project he is
up to. Nor does he recieve useful tutorage from resident
staff or supervisors, or he would have consulted a
couple of basic texts so he at least would be able to
formulate questions that makes sense.
As for the rest of us, we might just as well get used
to it. This is what the future of academia is all about.
Rune
Reply by Randy Yates●June 3, 20072007-06-03
julius <juliusk@gmail.com> writes:
> OK, how about a toast to all the regulars on this newsgroup
> and the apparently increasing popularity (be it good or bad)? :-)
Hear, hear! <pint of favorite beer slurped here>
--
% Randy Yates % "Remember the good old 1980's, when
%% Fuquay-Varina, NC % things were so uncomplicated?"
%%% 919-577-9882 % 'Ticket To The Moon'
%%%% <yates@ieee.org> % *Time*, Electric Light Orchestra
http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr
Reply by julius●June 3, 20072007-06-03
On Jun 3, 9:10 am, R.Lyons@_BOGUS_ieee.org (Rick Lyons) wrote:
> Hi Guys,
> I've been absent from this newsgroup for many
> weeks now, and this morning I scanned through
> the recent posts starting with the month of May.
>
> I was shocked to see so many posts requesting the
> solutions to problems that sure sounded like
> homework problems to me. (Laplace transforms,
> solving differential equations, solving for
> bilear transformations, etc.)
>
> One guy actually wrote (something like),
> "My boss asked me the following question..."
> and then he typed a multi-part question that
> was wording exactly as DSP-textbook homework
> problems are worded.
>
> And this guy named Vista! He seems to be
> working on 8-10 different DSP problems and he
> seems unsure of how to even begin to resolve those
> problems. (And he's in a terrible hurry to
> receive solutions.) How could one guy, with only
> a small bit of DSP understanding, be required to
> solve so many different DSP problems in such a hurry?
> Sure seems strange to me.
>
> Perhaps the weirdest post that I read this morning
> was:
>
> "Hi,
> can anyone plz give me the matlab code for the
> "analog and forward" and "decode and forwad"?
> thanks"
>
> Ha ha. Posts like that one always tickle
> (and amaze) me. It's interesting to think about
> what could be going on inside the mind of someone who
> would type such a post and expect a meaningful answer.
>
> Anyway, ... I'm just mumbling and grumbling here.
> See Ya',
> [-Rick-]
Hey Rick, I think this newsgroup does get a flood of questions
towards the end of the semester. But for Vista, my impression
is that he is overthinking quite a bit and not reading his manuals.
He seems to have some mathematical knowledge, although he
is having a hard time accepting that we have very few discrete-
time processing tools. Who knows, he may end up discovering
the "next big thing" ;-).
Questioning limitations is good, but more thinking before asking
away is good. Although of course, it's hard to think things
through when you don't have anybody to correct and criticize.
I guess that's the nice thing about having a mentor or advisor
with competence in your problem area. Newgroups don't
necessarily make a much worse substitute though, given the
quality of the contributors here!
OK, how about a toast to all the regulars on this newsgroup
and the apparently increasing popularity (be it good or bad)? :-)
Cheers!!
Julius
Reply by Rick Lyons●June 3, 20072007-06-03
Hi Guys,
I've been absent from this newsgroup for many
weeks now, and this morning I scanned through
the recent posts starting with the month of May.
I was shocked to see so many posts requesting the
solutions to problems that sure sounded like
homework problems to me. (Laplace transforms,
solving differential equations, solving for
bilear transformations, etc.)
One guy actually wrote (something like),
"My boss asked me the following question..."
and then he typed a multi-part question that
was wording exactly as DSP-textbook homework
problems are worded.
And this guy named Vista! He seems to be
working on 8-10 different DSP problems and he
seems unsure of how to even begin to resolve those
problems. (And he's in a terrible hurry to
receive solutions.) How could one guy, with only
a small bit of DSP understanding, be required to
solve so many different DSP problems in such a hurry?
Sure seems strange to me.
Perhaps the weirdest post that I read this morning
was:
"Hi,
can anyone plz give me the matlab code for the
"analog and forward" and "decode and forwad"?
thanks"
Ha ha. Posts like that one always tickle
(and amaze) me. It's interesting to think about
what could be going on inside the mind of someone who
would type such a post and expect a meaningful answer.
Anyway, ... I'm just mumbling and grumbling here.
See Ya',
[-Rick-]