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Category: web

bib2html

One computer and one system-upgrade ago, I tried to convince people to set up their own MOPP (My Online Publications Page).

The essence of such pages is that they need an update, once in a while… I’m a bit embarrassed to admit it, but, I failed to re-install the package, following my own instructions.

Fortunately, there are plenty of good alternatives around, today. After playing a bit with bibtex2html, Ive settled for the bib2html perl script by Patrick Riley.

Included are well documented directions. The most important being that you have to do a

sudo ln -s /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl5 (( thank you Rupert, via the comments ))

and change the user-specific entries in the bib2html.conf configuration file (if you have already key.pdf files around, you can just drop them in the output-directory and set . as the paperfiledirlist, and they will be found and linked to automatically. If not, you can always include links in the bib-file). Further, if you want to link to web-pages of your coauthors, remember that the script expects you to use : LastName, FirstName | http://webpage even if you used a different convention in your bib-file.

The result can be seen here. For ebook-download-junks : Ive included again full PDF-files of all versions of my book (starting with version 1 from 1999 to the final published version of last year). They can best be found using the sort-by-type page.

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Decryptable, only on fridays

The mini-post Bill Gates’ favourite prime number, encrypted below, can only be read on a friday. Here’s why.

[BEGIN URLCRYPT decode at lce.xamai.ca/urlcrypt.php]

cScSYXdhkQUWRwVOMHzMMFdHwVdCU3VU5LcSNgXc
1VB2plVn7jPqxmJD51UWFETGVWUTR2XNNmH89EBH
M3EYxUAKcxOPoEVwcjJgUCGX4Bdd0xTkAFW2YVGi
YoEqs1FulUWaZRQCalJRd0Ix0iNq4BnAdERckxfE
VEMYpRGwM1MUIlJSN0Sd2VVXETUdFTZwUDq6IEVe
Z1EZFDFVlUIDx0Y+ZRYXQyWCREGWs0RIVzPItGGh
MDLSZFEXZFWqAWXFpSVUN2VjU1R4FGVCdlFdlVLM
VUl8czJlZCWDBRXc9jFhoFRrYVGmAFZhplViMRXd
x0SOFTGVoVM10zNgAhUYl1RTglKUIEKZh1N8dFIU
sVLGZnM1ITz6UnXBcXc1FncGwQBJYgACQ3BJUHC1
tweDMnBAcnBEsQ3KkwBk0VUmcSJ8N9eQoAEDlzOP
ljQF3CELZCUpEUWhZlKdFlSIdRZLBVMkA4Al9CXe
J3EW5VMvRRHoEFVqEVIQZ115YFWYYVc98kM4c9Zr
12drRURBB0EJL1KVFBaZl0YeECjUQUNdFFTLZFWh
gNGZRSMqAiLRNlXrZUVWMyWRcDRQRC5bBCFSlyRQ
sUWYM/Wu0lQlZTJl9GXQbVXaB1UhUVShglWZYiWw
QRWoMxVWBZUMl1NXZVZ2ESIpbDXU5lWTIELUsgyo
EFVqEVIQZVOWJIWYYVUXATXXhCMgoSZwk1XE5FQe
9iF6lmYukXYklmcmxHdpNXauc3d39yLmrDc0RHaA
5FQTYV5TZDFEtSSZ0yVss0QXkCVZBFGL5lYMtEQp
ADIq4CESh1BHNBUqQxEoEFXzAvQlQxUzYlXagRX5
8lFa8DSPlEIuk1rFB0EUUEIAB1AQIbT20lJVdBOS
NEGTdFTXETUdFTZ3QSVrABWYR0EfgCQZNladt0Jf
cTWYYSQo+lFdVFW2gET3YiprpWeANERbtxaitkRU
lSUcFTUXQhU+3iUVpnGjdxOaVRXhAyLmICWXMkUE
dqFoEVR3kkSjdFLkD0FtJAAIoAGR1ymYkVKkISZm
g1QQkYXaZxKRlFMQ0kNjBnT50DTCUQAA4w5CoXAB
IXd2NneDAJAJsQBCEXDJMHBOAQdEM3BFM3CIoQyM
EAAxpQB0Znc8NrdIAAET4gF14DPF4UPRdzWzQha5
YlOEdxYIh2P+50JnEDLxISXr12SWJkHwQxQhYkVj
ZVIa5VmnYFVY0lTFdzWV0NJlNyKqMkQQw1RbZEPG
JFZV9UMHdyEUQFKHBUUURlUidlVaVWIhYjISdxQ+
IFRWASWUxyUqNW5GpSUaRCVRZVW1p1FxwUXiwiFl
9SUfNUWUplcldkFwYlqWBTX2clXMkTPy8aNFowfF
gAe4lHeH4XDK0gDOsAeJwQq51AB+9QeJoAfOkUDF
UQBKgUNHByJjmCMtAhUdpVQGVmGRVULCxELEViUX
EsZAVFTZ93FuQFXdcgC

[END URLCRYPT]

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Writing & Blogging

Terry Tao is reworking some of his better blogposts into a book, to be published by the AMS (here’s a preliminary version of the book “What’s New?”)

After some thought, I decided not to transcribe all of my posts from last year (there are 93 of them!), but instead to restrict attention to those articles which (a) have significant mathematical content, (b) are not announcements of material that will be published elsewhere, and (c) are not primarily based on a talk given by someone else. As it turns out, this still leaves about 33 articles from 2007, leading to a decent-sized book of a couple hundred pages in length.

If you have a blog and want to turn it into a LaTeX-book, there’s no need to transcribe or copy every single post, thanks to the WPTeX tool. Note that this is NOT a WP-plugin, but a (simple at that) php-program which turns all posts into a bookcontent.tex file. This file can then be edited further into a proper book.

Unfortunately, the present version chokes on LaTeXrender-code (which is easy enough to solve doing a global ‘find-and-replace’ of the tex-tags by dollar-signs) but worse, on Markdown-code… But then, someone fluent in php-regex will have no problems extending the libs/functions.php file (I hope…).

At the moment I’m considering turning the Mathieu-games-posts into a booklet. A possible title might be Mathieumatical Games. Rereading them (and other posts) I regret to be such an impatient blogger. Often I’m interested in something and start writing posts about it without knowing where or when I’ll land. This makes my posts a lot harder to get through than they might have been, if I would blog only after having digested the material myself… Typical recent examples are the tori-crypto-posts and the Bost-Connes algebra posts.

So, I still have a lot to learn from other bloggers I admire, such as Jennifer Ouellette who maintains the Coctail Party Physics blog. At the moment, Jennifer is resident blogger-journalist at the Kavli Institute where she is running a “Journal Club” workshop giving ideas on how to write better about science.

But the KITP is also committed to fostering scientific communication. That’s where I come in. Each Friday through April 26th, I’ll be presiding over a “Journal Club” meeting focusing on some aspect of communicating science.

Her most recent talk was entitled To Blog or Not to Blog? That is the Question and you can find the slides as well as a QuickTime movie of her talk. They even plan to set up a blog for the participants of the workshop. I will surely follow the rest of her course with keen interest!

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