Why? If it's original work, and it does not violate existing laws, whoever makes it should have the right to seek compensation for their work, if they see fit. It's basically software like any other. Licensing models have been successfully applied to software plugins in past, mods fall into that category.
I'd agree that the modder should have the legal right to create a $10/month subscription mod, because I don't like copyright being so extensive as to give the game's authors control over that, but also really don't want to see such "licensing models" spread to another community that has so far remained largley uninfected.
Somewhat related field, compressive sensing, attempts to answer some of those questions (particularly missing data, uneven sampling and errors) using a L1 minimisation technique.
That was actually fantastic. The professor is quite goofy, but he really goes over everything from first principles and goes through a real example - constructing a solution without any cheating :))
I was a bit bummed out there weren't a lot of Compressed Sensing libraries around, but it seems you just need a "convex optimization" routine (aka linear programming). And these seem to exist in every language
I'll try to play around with this!
Thank you so much
From the video tutorial is seems relatively straightforward. I guess the basis selection is a fundamental issue that will be problem-specific.
I will have to try it with some concrete examples. The first question I have is, will it still work if you have a lot of high frequency noise? In the cases I'm thinking either there is measurement noise or just other jitter. So while the lower frequencies are sparse but I guess the higher frequencies not so much. I can't bandpass the data b/c it's got lots of holes or it's irregularly spaced.
>You imagine that XSLT is more secure but it’s not. It’s never been. Even pure XSLT is quite capable of Turing-complete tomfoolery, and from the beginning there were loopholes to introduce unsafe code.
It looks like it was fun, and I think that was the point.
I've done freeform electronics before, using wiring that was mainly the snipped-off legs of through hole resistors. I guess if you were fancy you could buy some bus wire. The assemblies are horrific to look at, and I love them.
Why? If it's original work, and it does not violate existing laws, whoever makes it should have the right to seek compensation for their work, if they see fit. It's basically software like any other. Licensing models have been successfully applied to software plugins in past, mods fall into that category.
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