Elaborate setup for blogging with Emacs, org-mode, Jekyll and Github actions. Too complicated for my taste, but I still might learn something from the description.
The statement "I've found that Aberth performs worse [than Weierstrass-Durand-Kerner] on most examples as its faster convergence is offset by the slower evaluation." is interesting.
Fredrik Johansson is the author of https://mpmath.org/, https://arblib.org/ and https://flintlib.org/ arbitrary-precision libraries and of the Mathematical Functions Grimoire https://fungrim.org/
statichost.eu is a place for publishing your static websites in a privacy- respecting manner. We do not collect, store or process any personal information related to website visits.
Found on Björn Lindström's page https://elektrubadur.se/about_page/
website2org.el downloads a website, transforms it into minimalist Orgmode, and presents the results as either a temporary Orgmode buffer or creates an .org file in a specified directory.
Might be useful for conversion of my few HTML pages to Orgmode.
Found on Sacha Chua's blog https://sachachua.com/blog/2024/10/2024-10-14-emacs-news/, where the link text states
"Building a blog from Org Mode files using only Emacs". I am not sure whether this is correct, the emacs lisp file has the description
"org-jekyll.el --- Custom Emacs plugin to operate with my OrgMode+Jekyll blog". Does it need Jekyll?
His web site https://eugene-andrienko.com/en/ has a "Powered by Jekyll" link.
Mentioned on the TUHS mailing list https://www.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2024-September/030872.html
Some interesting documents are
There Is No Royal Road to Programs - A Trilogy on Raster Ellipses and Programming Methodology (M. Douglas McIlroy)
MM 67-4734-7 1967-05-15 2.54 MB An Introduction to the Available Programs and Other Design Aids for the Design of Filters, Equalizers and Other Networks
MM 67-5311-18 1967-08-29 1.27 MB Notes on the Design of Cosine Roll-Off Filters