http://thiqaruni.org/mathpdf9/(86).pdf
The book didn’t include Chapter 30 - "MAXIMUM ENTROPY: MATRIX FORMULATION"
Opening in adobe seems to work out better for me.
http://thiqaruni.org/mathpdf9/(86).pdf
The book didn’t include Chapter 30 - "MAXIMUM ENTROPY: MATRIX FORMULATION"
Opening in adobe seems to work out better for me.
I don’t regret buying a brand new hardcopy of this book… it’s the best textbook I’ve ever owned. I find it really tedious to read a book like this with lots of typeset math on a computer screen.
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I bought the hardcover too. After I had already printed out the draft and read it multiple times.
I really wish they had a kindle version, though. Or some electronic version. It really seems primitive not to be able to run a search on something I’ve read,. Or bookmark. Or tag sections. And where’s my hover car?
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I agree, I can’t wait for ebook readers that actually work well for reading textbooks and scientific journal articles.
Amusing E.T. Jaynes comment:
Jaynes (1974)
Is this the same as the chapters here?
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Looks like they were both copied from here, where they sat for 10 years until they publisher complained. archive
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The Wayback Machine. Nice. I should keep that in mind more often.
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If you’re really serious, you could come up with a setup that tries to archive your browsing history into the Internet Archive like I have.
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Very cool. I hadn’t given it much thought, but yes, I’d like my history more available.
Since you’re so clever, I’ve got another one for you. Now that you’ve got it all in the archive, can you do a custom search only within your history?
I know you could do that in your local cache. You’d think that google could set that up as one of their features. That would be way cool, and save you the trouble.
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You mean do a custom Google search only over URLs already in my Firefox URL history? I can’t do that, no. (In part, because my current Firefox profile is only 2 years old or so.) I prefer going through Evernote, IRC logs, site searches, or just my local cache as you point out.
I think one could set it up if one really wanted to, though. Google offers Custom Search Engines to which you can upload target URLs in an XML file thing. >6k URLs blows the limit, but the CSEs let you specify pages where any URL on that page is then treated as a target, so you’d just dump your history onto a page and specify that.