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2016-07-18

  • 06:40 UTC (new) (history) 2016-07-18 Ledger – virtual postings aka envelopes . . . . Marcin Borkowski As I mentioned some time ago, I’ve been a ledger user since 2014. Until now, however, I did not really use any of its advanced features. There are a lot of them; the problem is, the manual is not the best one I’ve read. (Don’t get me wrong – it’s not that bad. But while it is a decent manual, it makes a very bad tutorial. Yes, there is a tutorial-like section at the beginning, and it’s nice, it does cover only the very basics.) So I figured out that after almost two and a half years of using Ledger, it’s high time to read the manual again. It turned out that I found one feature I’m probably going to use: virtual transactions.

2016-07-11

2016-07-04

  • 20:44 UTC (new) (history) 2016-07-04 Compiling a single Beamer frame in AUCTeX . . . . Marcin Borkowski Some time ago I basically stopped using Beamer. I turned to reveal.js, and did a few presentation in it, using Org-mode’s exporter. That was nice, my slides were not “like anyone else’s” (since everyone and their mother uses Beamer), and even equations worked great thanks to MathJax. Some time ago, I taught a Calculus course (which is a challenge on its own, probably worth a blog post or two, especially that it is not aimed at mathematicians, but geographers – but that’s another story). The slides are very diagram-heavy – you know, all sorts of stuff like tangent lines (since we’re doing derivatives), approximations of arc length or areas (since we’re doing integrals), and occasional cute pictures (since we’re also having fun, or so I hope at least). And it turned out that reveal.js (or at least the Org reveal exporter) really doesn’t like images. And it didn’t let me zoom them. Maybe if I were a CSS wizard, I could make it play nice. But I’m not, and I started missing Beamer, with its very precise control of what goes where. So I came back.

2016-06-27

  • 12:02 UTC (new) (history) 2016-06-27 Make yourself known – results . . . . Marcin Borkowski Now that the dust has settled, let me write a few words about the results of the Make yourself known contest. Let me break the bad news first: I didn’t win. Not that I expected that (though I had a faint hope), but I have to say that I’m just a little bit disappointed. Here’s why. There was just short of 300 contestants at the beginning; it turned out that only 70 of them lasted to the end. I was one of them, so I may officially call myself a “finalist” (though “semifinals” would probably fit better). Out of these 70 people, sixteen were chosen for the finals – and here’s where my (slight) disappointment comes from: I was not one of them. But there are plenty of good news.

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