home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!wupost!usc!news.service.uci.edu!ucivax!news.claremont.edu!nntp-server.caltech.edu!andrey
- From: andrey@cco.caltech.edu (Andre T. Yew)
- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Subject: Re: CD Sound (again?)
- Date: 28 Dec 1992 06:23:10 GMT
- Organization: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
- Lines: 25
- Message-ID: <1hm6geINNhpi@gap.caltech.edu>
- References: <1992Dec28.052109.13426@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: punisher.caltech.edu
-
- kong@leland.Stanford.EDU (Kong Kritayakirana) writes:
-
- >From: andrey@cco.caltech.edu (Andre T. Yew)
- >
- >> A much better explanation of this is found in the
- >>book by Oppenheimer, somebody, and Young, called, I think,
- >>_Signals and Systems_. It's a red book.
- >
- >Oppenheimer and Schaefer (forgive my spelling) "Discrete Time Signal
- >Processing"
-
- At last, I've found the reference. It's _Signals and Systems_
- by Oppenheim, Wilsky, and Young. It's a pretty good book that's
- easy to follow, if you're prepared to do some amount of scratchwork
- (some of the most relevent things are in the exercises). There
- are some other fun party games you learn in the book -- impress
- all your friends by deriving the closed-form formula for the Fibonacci
- numbers, for example :) :) :).
-
- Your other points are well-taken though -- thanks!
-
- --Andre
-
- --
- Andre Yew andrey@cco.caltech.edu (131.215.139.2)
-