Path: utzoo!attcan!telly!lethe!torsqnt!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!ames!sun-barr!newstop!suntops!santa_fe.Tops.Sun.COM!jisom From: jisom@santa_fe.Tops.Sun.COM (Jim Isom) Newsgroups: comp.dsp Subject: Re: DSP textbook Message-ID: <668@suntops.Tops.Sun.COM> Date: 22 Sep 89 17:34:50 GMT References: <1989Sep20.195449.3833x@ivucsb.sba.ca.us> <7070001@hpnmdla.HP.COM> <459@eedsp.gatech.edu> Sender: news@suntops.Tops.Sun.COM Reply-To: jisom@santa_fe.tops.sun.com (Jim Isom) Organization: Sun Microsystems, Inc. Mt. View, Ca. Lines: 26 In article <459@eedsp.gatech.edu> jensen@bessel.eedsp.gatech.edu (P. Allen Jensen) writes: >"Discrete-time Signal Processing" by Oppenheim and Schafer >is about the best I know of as well (I work with Dr. Scahfer here at Ga. Tech >and I think I may try to convince him to read this news group) > >P. Allen Jensen Please try to get him to interract with the net on this subject. I have a copy of another of their books "Digital Signal Processing" that I have used for many years; it's my favorite. Dr. Schafer is certainly one of the most knowledgeable and well-known experts on DSP in the world. This could become a real learning experience group. In a slightly different vein... does anyone have an idea for a way to share equations with a (hopefully large) group of net users? One particular platform's graphics or typesetting would likely be out. I'm thinking of postscript, but I have no idea of the spread of users that could use it. This concern has arisen before; DSP needs sigmas, limits, etc to even begin to say anything. Ideas here? Dr. Schafer? Jim ... jisom@sun.com Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.