If you are unfamiliar with my Web site, I invite you to visit and look around. True to its name, it is rather eclectic, consisting of the following sections:
- Biography: Résumé, etc., and a description of consulting services I can perform
- Church Resources: Liturgical materials, commentary on church politics, and poems on spiritual and ecclesiastical topics
- Commentary: Essays on topics both trivial and important
- Computer Science: A random, incomplete collections of papers on computer science and software engineering
- Fiction: Stories (a rather short section of the Web site)
- Language Notes: Observations about American English
- Poetry: Poems on a variety of subjects
- Recreational Math: Amusing material from obscure corners of the world of mathematics
A few specific items deserve special note. In the Computer Science, I have a helpful article on converting number from one base to another. “Conversion of Number Representations” clarifies some often confusing issues. My presentation on digital invariants is perhaps the most complete presentation on the subject on the Web, though I don’t claim that the topic is on the cutting edge of mathematics. (Did you know that
371 = 33 + 73 + 13 ?
I believe that my pages on curve-stitch designs may be interesting even to those who are not mathematically inclined, since they contain a lot of pretty pictures.
Finally, I’d like to put in a good word for the Poetry section of Lionel Deimel’s Farrago. My verse is probably out of the mainstream of modern poetry, but that may be a good thing. I would especially like to direct your attention to my “Hooker hymn,” “Authorities,” which I believe fills an empty niche in Anglican hymnody that needs to be occupied.
Comments and suggestions related to Lionel Deimel’s Farrago are always welcome.
Finally, I’d like to put in a good word for the Poetry section of Lionel Deimel’s Farrago. My verse is probably out of the mainstream of modern poetry, but that may be a good thing. I would especially like to direct your attention to my “Hooker hymn,” “Authorities,” which I believe fills an empty niche in Anglican hymnody that needs to be occupied.
Comments and suggestions related to Lionel Deimel’s Farrago are always welcome.
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