I'm in the USA and I can see them OK.rprosperi wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 2:52 pmImages are not visible here (USA), though it appears Walter can see them. Anyone else having trouble seeing them?pica wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 10:40 amSo here are a couple more.
I have included an inversion to show how the impression is often quite different. But you can always do it easily yourself in Gimp.
The Chinese characters are wu-wei, the Daoist concept of getting things done naturally, with out scheming or manipulating.
Famous equations
Forum rules
Do you have a creative streak? Post your OFFIMG photos here.
Images MUST be in Windows-NT .bmp format at a resolution of 400x240 pixels and 1-bit colour depth or they will not be displayed by the DM42. Images that do not meet this requirement will be removed from the forum
Do you have a creative streak? Post your OFFIMG photos here.
Images MUST be in Windows-NT .bmp format at a resolution of 400x240 pixels and 1-bit colour depth or they will not be displayed by the DM42. Images that do not meet this requirement will be removed from the forum
-
- Posts: 795
- Joined: Wed May 03, 2017 7:46 pm
- Location: Malone, NY USA
Re: Famous equations
Tom L
Some people call me inept but I'm as ept as anybody!
DM10L SN: 059/100
DM41X SN: 00023 (Beta)
DM41X SN: 00506 (Shipping)
DM42 SN: 00025 (Beta)
DM42 SN: 00221 (Shipping)
WP43 SN: 00025 (Prototype)
Some people call me inept but I'm as ept as anybody!
DM10L SN: 059/100
DM41X SN: 00023 (Beta)
DM41X SN: 00506 (Shipping)
DM42 SN: 00025 (Beta)
DM42 SN: 00221 (Shipping)
WP43 SN: 00025 (Prototype)
Re: Famous equations
These errors would not have happened if you (pica) had chosen this form:Thomas Okken wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 3:59 pmI can see them, but I'm not grokking them. Translating m c ↑ 2 × E - to algebraic yields 2 * m^c - E... Maybe that's a famous equation, but not one I recognize.
May I guess you are spoiled by RPL (but not sufficiently)? One can do the postfix notation to death but may fall in pits ...
@Thomas: grokking?? TIA for enlightenment!
Last edited by Walter on Fri Apr 27, 2018 5:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041
Re: Famous equations
Thanks Thomas. Weird, I can see them in Chrome, but not in IE11. That's new.Thomas Okken wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 3:59 pmI can see them, but I'm not grokking them. Translating m c ↑ 2 × E - to algebraic yields 2 * m^c - E... Maybe that's a famous equation, but not one I recognize.
I think he meant the power of 2 applies to the c, but you are right that's not what it says. And m to the c is a lot of m, but not so much E....
--bob p
DM42: β00071 & 00282, DM41X: β00071 & 00656, DM10L: 071/100
DM42: β00071 & 00282, DM41X: β00071 & 00656, DM10L: 071/100
Re: Famous equations
Hmm. Maybe I am a bit spoilt. I am now in a dilemma.
E=mc^2 was going to be boring, on grounds of being so famous that it is commonplace.
An RPN program listing was not pretty enough for my liking, so I compromised, but I guess it is a bit of a mishmash now.
Maybe <<m c 2 ^ * E - >> as pure RPL should be the way to go, but is this appropriate for an RPN machine?
I am willing to bend to advise from other authorities and redo it when there is a consensus on a good RP* rendering.
Or maybe <<E m c 2 ^ * - >>
On the other hand Thomas, c squared on my DM42 definitely comes out as c ↑2
Odd that some people don't see the images. I may live in a planetary backwater, but dropbox links should be mainstream.
E=mc^2 was going to be boring, on grounds of being so famous that it is commonplace.
An RPN program listing was not pretty enough for my liking, so I compromised, but I guess it is a bit of a mishmash now.
Maybe <<m c 2 ^ * E - >> as pure RPL should be the way to go, but is this appropriate for an RPN machine?
I am willing to bend to advise from other authorities and redo it when there is a consensus on a good RP* rendering.
Or maybe <<E m c 2 ^ * - >>
On the other hand Thomas, c squared on my DM42 definitely comes out as c ↑2
Odd that some people don't see the images. I may live in a planetary backwater, but dropbox links should be mainstream.
HP50G HP35s Free42 DM42.
Testing WP43S, C43.
Testing WP43S, C43.
-
- Posts: 1107
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2017 5:48 pm
- Location: Netherlands
- Contact:
Re: Famous equations
Nerdy pop culture reference: http://catb.org/jargon/html/G/grok.html
Re: Famous equations
Thanks! Hard reading times for internationals. But what doesn't kill us makes us stronger.Thomas Okken wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 5:42 pmNerdy pop culture reference: http://catb.org/jargon/html/G/grok.html
WP43 SN00000, 34S, and 31S for obvious reasons; HP-35, 45, ..., 35S, 15CE, DM16L S/N# 00093, DM42β SN:00041
Re: Famous equations
The Jargon File. Also available in dead tree form as The New Hacker's Dictionary, by Eric S. Raymond (a.k.a. esr).Walter wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 6:48 pmThanks! Hard reading times for internationals. But what doesn't kill us makes us stronger.Thomas Okken wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 5:42 pmNerdy pop culture reference: http://catb.org/jargon/html/G/grok.html
-
- Posts: 795
- Joined: Wed May 03, 2017 7:46 pm
- Location: Malone, NY USA
Re: Famous equations
In the '70s there was a T-shirt for Star Trek fans that read, "I grok Spock"Walter wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 4:37 pm@Thomas: grokking?? TIA for enlightenment!Thomas Okken wrote: ↑Fri Apr 27, 2018 3:59 pmI can see them, but I'm not grokking them. Translating m c ↑ 2 × E - to algebraic yields 2 * m^c - E... Maybe that's a famous equation, but not one I recognize.
Tom L
Some people call me inept but I'm as ept as anybody!
DM10L SN: 059/100
DM41X SN: 00023 (Beta)
DM41X SN: 00506 (Shipping)
DM42 SN: 00025 (Beta)
DM42 SN: 00221 (Shipping)
WP43 SN: 00025 (Prototype)
Some people call me inept but I'm as ept as anybody!
DM10L SN: 059/100
DM41X SN: 00023 (Beta)
DM41X SN: 00506 (Shipping)
DM42 SN: 00025 (Beta)
DM42 SN: 00221 (Shipping)
WP43 SN: 00025 (Prototype)
Re: Famous equations
Must be a USA thing. Perfectly visible here in the UK.
There are only 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary and those who do not.
-
- Posts: 1107
- Joined: Tue May 02, 2017 5:48 pm
- Location: Netherlands
- Contact:
Re: Famous equations
So far Bob is the only one who said he can't see them. Tom L and I both can, so assuming the problem is network-related, it's pretty localized, since neither Tom L nor I are very far from where Bob is.