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wow. it starting to look like USENET is getting pretty dead.

Started by robert bristow-johnson November 2, 2017
On Thursday, November 9, 2017 at 3:05:03 AM UTC+13, bule...@columbus.rr.com wrote:
> We need to find someone to call everyone stupident to get the views back up.
What happened to Vlad the impaler?
He died.  I have my speculations about how but do not know.
>On Thursday, November 2, 2017 at 3:25:44 AM UTC-5, robert
bristow-johnson
>wrote: >> this used to be a very active newsgroup. > >We've solved all the world's signal processing problems, and the
solutions
>have been amalgamated in a Matlab toolbox. Look for it in R2018a.
It's kind of true! I learned multirate DSP with polyphase FIRs a few decades ago from this group. Combined with RBJ's Filter cookbook, I've been able to solve 1,001 problems! --------------------------------------- Posted through http://www.DSPRelated.com
Well, if someone finds a really good replacement forum this same group
of people, please post back here where you are going so the rest of us
can follow you.


On Tuesday, January 2, 2018 at 11:54:19 PM UTC-5, Robert Scott wrote:
> Well, if someone finds a really good replacement forum this same group > of people, please post back here where you are going so the rest of us > can follow you.
agreed mark
On Wed, 03 Jan 2018 04:54:16 GMT, no-one@notreal.invalid (Robert
Scott) wrote:

>Well, if someone finds a really good replacement forum this same group >of people, please post back here where you are going so the rest of us >can follow you.
Retirement? ;) Actually I think some people moved to dsprelated.com and some to dsp.stackexchange.com. Neither are quite the same as usenet and naturally all have different cultures and groups of people.
Eric Jacobsen <eric.jacobsen@ieee.org> wrote:

>On Wed, 03 Jan 2018 04:54:16 GMT, no-one@notreal.invalid (Robert
>>Well, if someone finds a really good replacement forum this same group >>of people, please post back here where you are going so the rest of us >>can follow you.
>Retirement?
>Actually I think some people moved to dsprelated.com and some to >dsp.stackexchange.com. Neither are quite the same as usenet and >naturally all have different cultures and groups of people.
I'm sort-of retired, as are probably others, but I also think that DSP has become a less-appreciated niche than it once was. S.
On 01/04/2018 01:01 AM, Steve Pope wrote:
> I'm sort-of retired, as are probably others, but I also think that DSP > has become a less-appreciated niche than it once was.
Interesting viewpoint. DSP isn't exactly going away. Quite the opposite. It continues its march deeper and deeper into systems, displacing more analogue elements of them. Steve
On Thu, 4 Jan 2018 05:39:53 +0000, Steve Underwood <steveu@dis.org>
wrote:

>On 01/04/2018 01:01 AM, Steve Pope wrote: >> I'm sort-of retired, as are probably others, but I also think that DSP >> has become a less-appreciated niche than it once was.
>Interesting viewpoint. DSP isn't exactly going away. Quite the opposite. >It continues its march deeper and deeper into systems, displacing more >analogue elements of them. > >Steve
I think it is a maturing field, though, so the number of researchers needed is less. The automated tools available allow practitioners to get a lot done without having the depth of knowledge that was typically needed in the past. And those people who do dive in and want and/or need to know a lot have google and the rest of the intarwebs to get their questions answered, ironically probably sometimes by searching comp.dsp history. So, we're dinosaurs. Embrace it. ;)
Steve Underwood  <steveu@dis.org> wrote:

>On 01/04/2018 01:01 AM, Steve Pope wrote:
>> I'm sort-of retired, as are probably others, but I also think that DSP >> has become a less-appreciated niche than it once was.
>Interesting viewpoint. DSP isn't exactly going away. Quite the opposite. >It continues its march deeper and deeper into systems, displacing more >analogue elements of them.
Yes, and this is why I think it's become less of a niche. A design group is more likely to already have DSP design talent. This is especially true if you look at it at the algorithm level. You don't need a specific DSP expert anymore to design an FFT or a Viterbi decoder. (Or, so program managers now believe.) Steve