From Mailer@gauss.siam.org Wed Mar 19 142859 1997 Date Wed, 19 David H. Bailey and Simon Plouffe Recognizing Numerical Constants Numbers Please send your Newsletter contributions directly to the Editor http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/JAT/DATA/OPSFNET/1997.02.fixed
Extractions: . Topic #4 OP-SF NET 4.2 - March 15, 1997 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From: OP-SF Net editor , Walter Van Assche Subject: Bourbaki Lecture on Dunkl operators On March 1, 1997 Gert Heckman (Catholic University of Nijmegen) delivered a lecture in the Seminaire Bourbaki, Paris on "Dunkl operators". We congratulate Gert Heckman and Charles Dunkl. Topic #7 OP-SF NET 4.2 - March 15,1997 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From: Dick Askey Subject: Reprinting of "Asymptotics and Special Functions" Readers may be interested to learn that my book "Asymptotics and Special Functions", originally published by Academic Press in 1974, has just been reprinted by A.K. Peters, Ltd. It is again in hardback form and it lists at $69. Copies can be ordered through booksellers (ISBN: 1-56881-069-5) or directly from the publisher at 289 Linden Street, Wellesley, MA 02181; email: akpeters@tiac.net. Topic #9 OP-SF NET 4.2 - March 15,1997 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From: Martin Muldoon Subject: ftp site for papers in Orthogonal Polynomials and Special Functions Hans Haubold's ftp archive for preprints in the area of Orthogonal Polynomials and Special functions is the continuation of Waleed Al-Salam's preprint archive. One can approach the archive by anonymous ftp to unvie6.un.or.at, directory siam. Very recently, Hans Haubold has constructed a convenient WWW interface for this ftp site, at the address ftp://unvie6.un.or.at/siam/opsf_new/00index.html Via this home page you can move to a page listing all available files in alphabetical order of authors, and offering a link to each file. You can also move from the home page to the ftp interface. At the moment it is only in this way that you can reach the submissions directory, where the most recent contributions reside. Hans Haubold is sending regular information about new submissions to a large mailing list. Please contact him
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Europe Online Book Catalog Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information New Search Help on this page Data Editor Plouffe, Simon Title The Value of Zeta(3) to 1,000,000 places Language English LoC Class QA: Science: Mathematics Subject Mathematics EText-No. Release Date No Reviews There is a review of this book available. Read this eBook online (experimental feature) Download this eBook Edition Format Encoding Compression Size Download Links Plain text none 996 KB rastko.net Plain text zip 472 KB rastko.net If you are located outside of the U.S. you may want to download from a mirror site located near you to improve performance. Select a mirror site. If you need a special character set, try our new recode facility (experimental) Most recently updated: 2004-12-19 17:39:39.
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Europe Online Book Catalog Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information New Search Help on this page Data Editor Plouffe, Simon Title The First 1001 Fibonacci Numbers Language English LoC Class QA: Science: Mathematics Subject Mathematics EText-No. Release Date No Reviews There is a review of this book available. Read this eBook online (experimental feature) Download this eBook Edition Format Encoding Compression Size Download Links Plain text none 121 KB rastko.net Plain text zip 60 KB rastko.net If you are located outside of the U.S. you may want to download from a mirror site located near you to improve performance. Select a mirror site. If you need a special character set, try our new recode facility (experimental) Most recently updated: 2004-12-19 17:39:39.
This Is Project Gutenberg This List Has Been Downloaded From The Nicolo, 14691527 Mackay, Charles, 1814-1889 Editor Malory, Thomas Mandeville, Rutherford Hayes, 1894- Plouffe, Simon Plutarch Poe, Edgar Allan, http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/authors9809a1.txt
American Scientist Online from 1972 until 1984 and was Editor of American Scientist from 1990 to 1992 . On Neil Sloane s sequence server and Simon Plouffe s Inverse Symbolic http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AuthorDetail/authorid/490
Extractions: Home Current Issue Archives Bookshelf ... Subscribe In This Section Search Book Reviews by Issue Issue Index Topical Index ... Classics Site Search Advanced Search Visitor Login Username Password Help with login Forgot your password? Change your username Senior Writer Brian Hayes writes the "Computing Science" column for American Scientist . He has written similar columns for Scientific American , for Computer Language and for The Sciences . Mr. Hayes was a member of the Editorial Board of Scientific American from 1972 until 1984 and was Editor of American Scientist from 1990 to 1992. Apart from the column, Mr. Hayes's major project is a book called Infrastructure: A Field Guide to the Industrial Landscape, forthcoming (September 2005) from W. W. Norton Company. Partial list of publications (The majority of the American Scientist columns and book reviews are available on this site via links at the bottom of this page.)
NF > Reviews > Ranked Index Building Large KnowledgeBased Systems; N. David Mermin, Editor. Boojums Allthe Way Through Smalltalk with Style; NJA Sloane, Simon Plouffe. http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/~susan/bib/nf/ranked.htm
Extractions: unmissable 1 A Dictionary of Modern English Usage The Complete Plain Words Godel, Escher, Bach Investigations ... The Visual Display of Quantitative Information unmissable 1.5 Consciousness Explained Darwin's Dangerous Idea Wonderful Life The Elegant Universe ... Visual Explanations great stuff 2 The Timeless Way of Building A Pattern Language Fractals Everywhere The Limits of Mathematics ... The Psychology of Computer Programming great stuff 2.5 Turtle Geometry The Oregon Experiment The Evolution of Co-operation How Nature Works ... Somebody Somewhere worth reading 3 Language Myths Extreme Programming Explained Planning Extreme Programming The Spike ... Understanding Computers and Cognition worth reading 3.5 Introduction to Artificial Life Extreme Programming Applied The Computer Privacy Handbook Guide to Better Smalltalk ... Bringing Design to Software passes the time 4 Send This Jerk the Bedbug Letter The Ten Second Internet Manager AntiPatterns and Patterns in Software Configuration Management Mother Tongue ... Fifty per cent Proof passes the time 4.5 AntiPatterns Non-Standard Computation Silicon Second Nature How to Lie with Maps ... Eccentrics waste of time 5 Java-SIG's 100 Best Applets Computers and the Imagination Advanced Smalltalk Virtual Organisms unfinishable 6 Sophie's World Data Smog
SS > NF Reviews > Ranked Index Smalltalk with Style; NJA Sloane, Simon Plouffe. The Encyclopedia of Integer Chaos Theory Tamed; Terry Winograd, Editor. Bringing Design to Software http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/~susan/bib/nf/_misc/ranked.htm
Extractions: home NF reviews unmissable 1 Handbook of Mathematical Functions A Dictionary of Modern English Usage The Complete Plain Words Godel, Escher, Bach ... The Visual Display of Quantitative Information unmissable 1.5 Consciousness Explained Darwin's Dangerous Idea Wonderful Life Table of Integrals, Series and Products ... Style great stuff 2 The Timeless Way of Building A Pattern Language Fractals Everywhere Beyond ... The Psychology of Computer Programming great stuff 2.5 Turtle Geometry The Oregon Experiment The Evolution of Co-operation Harnessing Complexity ... Somebody Somewhere worth reading 3 How to do Things with Words Language Myths Planning Extreme Programming Biblical Games ... Understanding Computers and Cognition worth reading 3.5 Entanglement Introduction to Artificial Life Extreme Programming Applied The Computer Privacy Handbook ... Evolutionary Electronics passes the time 4 Send This Jerk the Bedbug Letter Roundabouts of Great Britain The Ten Second Internet Manager AntiPatterns and Patterns in Software Configuration Management ... Britain from the Air passes the time 4.5 Agile Modeling AntiPatterns Non-Standard Computation Silicon Second Nature ... Eccentrics waste of time 5 Java-SIG's 100 Best Applets Computers and the Imagination Advanced Smalltalk Virtual Organisms unfinishable 6 Google Hacks Sophie's World Data Smog
Algorithmic Combinatorics - Links Peter Paule is working as Associate Editor for Computer Algebra for NIST s Inverse Symbolic Calculator at the CECM (including Simon Plouffe s Table of http://www.risc.uni-linz.ac.at/research/combinat/links/
Extractions: about welcome! the castle of hagenberg partners ... links search: sitemap On this page we have collected a few links to sites which we visit frequently. The links are divided into the following categories: Research Groups and People Current Projects Books, Journals, and Publishers Combinatorial Resources ... Search the Web European Mathematical Information Service , including Los Alamos XXX Archives ... MathWorld (by Eric Weisstein) Treasure Troves of Science Tables and Numbers
Journal Of Integer Sequences All submissions should be sent to the Editorin-chief, Florham Park, NJ USA),;Simon Plouffe (Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, PQ Canada), http://emis.math.ecnu.edu.cn/journals/JIS/
To e Or Not To e? Thats A Constant Question University of Toronto mathematician Chandler Davis, Ph.D., Editor of The On the other hand, numerical analyst Simon Plouffe of HydroQuebec in Montreal, http://main.uab.edu/show.asp?durki=25350
Links In English 81 (July 1 To August 31, 2002 - 16) Classical Editor Rob Barnett Music Webmaster Len Mullenger generated usinga new tagging program written by Simon Plouffe at the CECM, Simon Fraser. http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/7863/furt/alfa_english81.html
No Title At the request of the Editor, Rob Calderbank held the following The two mostrecent are The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences gif (with Simon Plouffe), http://www.itsoc.org/publications/nltr/97_dec/05slo/05slo.html
Extractions: Neil Sloane Wins the 1998 Claude E. Shannon Award The Information Theory Society's highest honor, the Claude E. Shannon Award, is awarded annually to an individual who has achieved consistent and profound contributions to the field of information theory. The recipient is chosen by a selection committee consisting of Society officers and two former Shannon Award recipients. At the request of the Editor, Rob Calderbank held the following interview with Neil Sloane in honor of his receipt of the Award. Interview with Neil Sloane Q: How did you come to do a Ph.D. in electrical engineering (rather than mathematics, say), and why at Cornell? A: During my years as an undergraduate at the University of Melbourne (in Australia) I had a scholarship from the state phone company, which in those days was called the Postmaster General's Department. So in a sense I have been working for ``the phone company'' ever since 1956. I think that's the main reason I chose engineering rather than mathematics, because of this scholarship. In fact I ended up doing two four-year undergraduate degrees more or less simultaneously, one in electrical engineering and one in math. I remember that during the summer breaks we had to learn how to erect telephone poles, to splice cables with hot lead while sitting at the top of these poles, to test telephone circuits, to drive 10-ton trucks, and so on.
Home Page Of Yannick Gingras Simon Plouffe is also a former world record holder for remembering digits of The gradient Editor in the Gimp really lacks a undo but except from that it http://ygingras.net/
Extractions: Home About Resume (French) Resume (English) ... NetHack If someone typed something like date +"%Y" at his terminal, assuming that he used the Gregorian calendar, he would probably see something like . If the same person was to read , he would probably see July 20, 1971 near the beginning. Only 13 years after the discovery of the Bessemer process we had the first transcontinental railroad , after more that 30 years of email, all email clients suck. Anyone who uses email for something else than remote backups knows what I'm talking about. If you need to read your emails from more than one location you can probably forget all the nice "native" clients. But webmails requires heavy usage of the mouse, lacks many important features like a usable spell-checker and incremental search. All the webmail service provider have EULA that requires your first born and a pint of fresh blood a month. Namespace pollution is another problem, I don't want my email to be y._kk_gingras234252_asd@example.com
Projecto Gutenberg Plouffe, Simon, Editor. Value Of Zeta(3) To 1000000 places, The First 1000Euler Numbers, The First 1001 Fibonacci Numbers, The http://mirror.bn.pt/gutenberg/browse/IA_P.HTM
IMATI Classified Links www.w3.org/Amaya/ Amaya W3C s Editor / Browser Amaya 8.2 200311-13 Gourdon and Pascal Sebah; pi.lacim.uqam.ca/eng/ Simon Plouffe s inverter http://www.imati.cnr.it/links.html
Number Systems Books - GameSpy.com Price Comparison Dynamical Systems V Subtitle Bifurcation Theory and Catastrophe Theory. Editor,VI Arnol D Author, Simon Plouffe , NJA Sloane http://gamespy.pricegrabber.com/search_attrib_books.php/bkcat2=1282
Extractions: Video Games Computers Electronics More.. ... Your Account Search All Products Apparel Books Computers Electronics Magazines Movies Music Musical Instruments Office Photography Software Sporting Goods Toys Video Games for Home Books Books Sorted by Popularity Sort by Title Numbers, Sequences and Series (1 Releases)
Listing Of Authors Nichols, Philip, Editor Nicolay, Helen, 18661954 Nield, Jonathan Niemann, August,1839-1919 Plouffe, Simon, Plunkitt, George Washington Plutarch http://www.e-text.worldwide-library.org/listing_of_authors.htm
Extractions: This page contains pointers to lecture notes, books, software, etc. of particular interest to researchers in discrete mathematics. If you know of any such items please address e-mail to the Managing Editor . Thank you. The MACEK package, written by Petr Hlineny, is for practical structural computations with matroids representable over finite (partial) fields. This package supports easy manipulation with matrices representing matroids over finite partial fields. There are tests for minors, equivalence, branch-width three, connectivity, and other structural properties available. One can also generate all nonequivalent 3-connected extensions of matroids. More functions are planned for the future, and suggestions are welcome. The Mathematica "guessing machine" RATE , written by Christian Krattenthaler, allows you to guess a closed form expression (if existent) for a sequence of numbers, given the first few terms of the sequence. Thus, RATE complements Neile Sloane and Simon Plouffe's SUPERSEEKER and Bruno Salvy and Paul Zimmermann's GFUN . The Maple equivalent of RATE, called
Equal Sums Of Like Powers Underwood Dudley; Editor, CMJ Date Thu, 16 Sep 1999 204356 0500; FromUnderwood Dudley Simon Plouffe ( Plouffe@cecm.sfu.ca ) http://euler.free.fr/eslp/discuss.htm
Extractions: Discussion and comments Sign my gusetbook View Guestbook Dmoz: Science: Math: Number Theory: Diophantine Equations: Equal Sums of Like Powers Number Theory Web Descriptions of areas/courses in number theory, lecture notes Computing Minimum Equal Sums Of Like Power Links Webs Link this Site: Mail Selcetion during 1997/7-1999/12 Subject: FYI: Your site chosen as an Open Directory Cool Site Date: Thu, 9 Sep 1999 00:15:23 -0700
Neil Sloane Wins The 1998 Claude E At the request of the Editor, Rob Calderbank held the following The two mostrecent are The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (with Simon Plouffe), http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/jc353/neil_sloane.htm
Extractions: Neil Sloane Wins the 1998 Claude E. Shannon Award The Information Theory Society's highest honor, the Claude E. Shannon Award, is awarded annually to an individual who has achieved consistent and profound contributions to the field of information theory. The recipient is chosen by a selection committee consisting of Society officers and two former Shannon Award recipients. At the request of the Editor, Rob Calderbank held the following interview with Neil Sloane in honor of his receipt of the Award. Interview with Neil Sloane Q: How did you come to do a Ph.D. in electrical engineering (rather than mathematics, say), and why at Cornell? A: During my years as an undergraduate at the University of Melbourne (in Australia) I had a scholarship from the state phone company, which in those days was called the Postmaster General's Department. So in a sense I have been working for ``the phone company'' ever since 1956. I think that's the main reason I chose engineering rather than mathematics, because of this scholarship. In fact I ended up doing two four-year undergraduate degrees more or less simultaneously, one in electrical engineering and one in math. I remember that during the summer breaks we had to learn how to erect telephone poles, to splice cables with hot lead while sitting at the top of these poles, to test telephone circuits, to drive 10-ton trucks, and so on.