%!PS % Fundamental Factors Underlying Recent Technological Innovations % =============================================================== % by Don Lancaster GG #68 TECHNINOV.PSL REVISED 2/10 /ggnum 68 store % Copyright c 2006 by Don Lancaster & Synergetics, Box 809, Thatcher, AZ, 85552 % (928) 428-4073 Email: don@tinaja.com Website: http://www.tinaja.com % Consulting services available http://www.tinaja.com/info01.html % Linking welcome. Reposting expressly forbidden. % All commercial rights and all electronic media rights ~fully~ reserved. % Linking usually welcome. Reposting expressly forbidden. Version 1.1 % IMPORTANT NOTE: Don Lancaster's file gonzo.ps is required for this program. % After obvious location mods, uncomment ONE of the following two lines: (C:\\Documents and Settings\\don\\Desktop\\gonzo\\gonzo.ps) run % use internal gonzo % (A:\\gonzo.ps) run % use external gonzo % NOTE THAT ALL PS FILENAME STRINGS !!!DEMAND!!! DOUBLE REVERSE SLASHES. % GONZO20A Guru Gonzo PostScript power tools (Interim release) % Includes gonzo justification and layout utilities. % Copyright c 1990, 1996, 2001 by Don Lancaster and Synergetics, Box 809, % Thatcher Arizona, 5552 (928) 428-4073 don@tinaja.com support % via http://www.tinaja.com All commercial rights and all electronic % media rights **FULLY** reserved. Reposting is expressly forbidden. % Many routines removed and cleaned at #58 %%%%%%%%%%% links menu directory %%%%%%%%%%%% % This code locks pdfmark commands out of a PostScript printer. /pdfmark where {pop}{userdict /pdfmark /cleartomark load put} ifelse % /surl "start url" marks the beginning of a text sequence to be urled. % It also paints the text blue... /surl {mark /blue cvx 0.33 /setgray cvx % change text to blue /currentpoint cvx % remember box start /urly /exch cvx /store cvx /urlx /exch cvx /store cvx ] cvx % complete deferred command printlist exch 3 index exch put % stuff into gonzo printlist exch 1 add exch % increment gonzo list count } def % /eurl "end url" unmarks the end of a text sequence and sets up % the pdfmark needed to define the Acrobat web link. /eurl {mark % start deferred proc exch % position url string % /black cvx 0 /setgray cvx % turn blue marker off % maintextcolor /setrgbcolor cvx % reset to main text color??? /aqua cvx /black cvx /makeurl cvx % defer call of url builder ] cvx % complete deferred proc printlist exch 3 index exch % stuff into gonzo printlist put exch 1 add exch % increment gonzo list count } def % /makeurl generates the pdfmark, receiving a {(urlstring) makeurl}. % Note that it is not called until formatted printlist time... /urlover 0.2 def % fraction of hot area over bounds /makeurl { /cururlname exch store % save the url string mark % start pdfmark currentfont /ScaleMatrix get 3 get /fsize exch store % guess height /Rect [ urlx fsize urlover mul sub % set box left x urly fsize urlover mul sub % set box left y currentpoint exch fsize urlover mul add exch fsize add ] /Border [ 0 0 0] % [0 0 0 ] = none; [0 0 2] = debug /Color [ .7 0 0 ] /Action <> /Subtype /Link /ANN % annotation type pdfmark % call pdf operators } def % /makeurlx generates the box specific pdfmark, receiving % a {(urlstring) makeurl}. % Note that it is not called until formatted printlist time... /makeurlx { /cururlnamex exch store % save the url string mark % start pdfmark /Rect [ xpos % set box left x ypos 0.9 sub % set box left y xpos 2.8 add % box right x ypos 0.9 sub 2.8 add % box right y ] /Border [ 0 0 0] % [0 0 0 ] = none; [0 0 2] = debug /Color [ .7 0 0 ] /Action <> /Subtype /Link /ANN % annotation type pdfmark % call pdf operators } def /maintextcolor {0 0 0 } def % text link specific data -- use dictionary instead below { /cubic01 {(http://www.tinaja.com/cubic01.asp) eurl} def /hack62 {(http://www.tinaja.com/glib/hack62.pdf) eurl} def /increment {(http://www.tinaja.com/text/bezgen3.html) eurl} def /interpolate {(http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze2vrva/design.html) eurl } def /bezmath {(http://www.tinaja.com/text/bezmath.html) eurl } def /table {(http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/imtable.psl) eurl } def } pop % dictionary method << % zzzzzzzzzzzz keep for search marker % added for revision /glair01 (http://www.tinaja.com/glair01.asp) /kijii (http://tucson.kijiji.com/) /imageview32 (http://www.arcatapet.net/imgv32.cfm) /newvideosites (http://www.tinaja.com/#video) /postproc.pdf(http://www.tinaja.com/glib/postproc.pdf) % entered during gg68 /LEDjournal (http://www.ledjournal.com/) /ebookread (http://www.tinaja.com/whtnu07.asp#11-14-07) /CIGS (http://www.google.com/search?q=cigs+solar&sourceid=mozilla-search&start=0&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official) /Quantumdot (http://www.google.com/search?q=quantum+dot+solar&sourceid=mozilla-search&start=0&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official) /nobodydog (http://www.unc.edu/depts/jomc/academics/dri/idog.html) /kaizen (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaizen) /circuitcellar (http://www.circuitcellar.com/guru/) /makemag (http://www.makezine.com/) /adamsadventures (http://www.msadams.com/downloads.htm) /linux (http://www.linux.org/) /opensource (http://www.opensource.org/) /craigslist (http://phoenix.craigslist.org/) /autotrader (http://www.autotrader.com/) /lulu (http://www.lulu.com/) /bookmarket (http://www.bookmarket.com/ondemand.html) /burgerking (http://www.bk.com) /newtek (http://www.newtek.com) /memsnet (http://www.memsnet.org/) /muse120.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/muse120.pdf) /supercap (http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/313/5794/1760?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&fulltext=carbon+pore+sizes&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&resourcetype=HWCIT) /quantumdots (http://www.google.com/search?q=%22quantum+dots%22+solar&sourceid=mozilla-search&start=0&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official) /datasheetarchive (http://www.datasheetarchive.com/chipPhotos/photosA.html) /googleearth (http://www.earth.google.com) /toystory (http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0114709/) /robotmovie (http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0358082/) /cars (http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0317219/) /netflix (http://www.netflix.com/) /blockbuster (http://www.blockbuster.com/online/) % entered during gg67 /puzz01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/puzz01.psl) /alphamet1 ( http://www.tkcs-collins.com/truman/alphamet/alphamet.shtml) /alphamet2 (http://www.tkcs-collins.com/truman/alphamet/alpha_gen.shtml) /alphamet3 (http://users.aol.com/s6sj7gt/mikealp.htm) /msinexec.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/msinexec.pdf) /paradigm.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/paradigm.pdf) % entered during gg66 /thunderbird (http://www.thunderbird.com) /spysweeper (http://www.webroot.com/consumer/products/spysweeper/?rc=1651) /norton (http://www.symantec.com/index.htm) /pestpatrol (http://www.pestpatrol.com/) /firefox (http://www.firefox.com) /sciencemag (http://www.sciencemag.org/) /worldfact (http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/) /internetdog (http://www.unc.edu/depts/jomc/academics/dri/idog.html) /zipcode (http://www.usps.com/ncsc/lookups/lookup_zip+4.html) /weather (http://www.weather.com/) /thomasreg (http://www.thomasregister.com/) /topozone (http://www.topozone.com/) /yahoostock (http://finance.yahoo.com/) /reversephone (http://www.reversephonedirectory.com/) /uspto (http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html) /msnbc (http://www.msnbc.com/) /imdb (http://us.imdb.com/) /loanamort (http://www.hsh.com/calc-amort.html) /kellybook (http://www.kbb.com/) /googlemaps (http://maps.google.com/) /newyorker (http://www.newyorker.com/) /currexch (http://www.xe.net/ucc/) /chemele (http://www.chemicalelements.com) /cnn (http://www.cnn.com) /areacodes (http://decoder.americom.com/cgi-bin/decoder.cgi) /tinajaoffsite (http://www.tinaja.com#offsite) /tinajaengines (http://www.tinja.com#engines) /walmart (http://www.walmart.com) /rssbook (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3D0764588486/donlancastersgurA/002-5434897-4181636) /webwb01 (http://www.tinaja.com/webwb01.asp) /weblib01 (http://www.tinaja.com/weblib01.asp) /validator (http://rss.scripting.com/) /webbooks (http://www.tinaja.com/books/bkwbmast.asp) /golive (http://www.adobe.com/products/golive/) /frontpage (http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/FX010858021033.aspx) /htmlbooks (http://www.tinaja.com/books/bkhtml.asp) /htmldummybook (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0764507230/donlancastersgurA/) /naa (http://www.auctioneers.org) /histolog.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/histolog.pdf) /analogeb.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/analogeb.pdf) /enhebay3.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/enhebay3.pdf) /ipswitch (http://www.ipswitch.com/Products/WS_FTP) /networksolutions (http://www.networksolutions.com) /whois (http://www.networksolutions.com/cgi-bin/whois/whois) % entered furing gg65 msexec summary /picpro (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/mspicpro.pdf) /fourier (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/muse90.pdf) % entered during GG64 log log graphs /pdfrm1 (http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/en/acrobat/sdk/pdf/pdf_creation_apis_and_specs/pdfmarkReference.pdf) /loglog01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/loglog01.psl) /loglog01.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glair/loglog01.pdf) /bookcvr1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/bookcvr1.psl) /bookcvr1.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glair/bookcvr1.pdf) % entered during gg 63 two phase magic sinewaves /numschip.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/numschip.pdf) /mspicpro.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/mspicpro.pdf) % entered during gg 62 enhance III /analogeb.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/analogeb.pdf) /rss (http://www.tinaja.com/whtnu.xml) /oreproptable (http://www.tinaja.com/whtnu05.asp#rogue3) /javascriptslideshow (http://www.codelifter.com/main/javascript/slideshow4.html) /logrptx2.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/logrptx2.psl) % entered during GG61 /jpg2pdf.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/jpg2pdf.pdf) /barcodeonline (http://www.raise-the-bar.co.uk/cgi-bin/webbarcodegen.pl) /barcodegen (http://www.terryburton.co.uk/barcodewriter/) /barcodetutorial (http://www.barcode-us.com/info_center/bookinfo.htm) /isbn (http://www.isbn.org/standards/home/index.asp) /bookcovr.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/bookcovr.psl) /bookcovr.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/bookcovr.pdf) /begstuff (http://www.tinaja.com/post01.asp#begstuff) /ghostscript (http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/) /bod01 (http://www.tinaja.com/bod01.asp) % entered during GG 60 /bezlenjf.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/bezlenjf.pdf) /bzlnsub1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/bzlnsub1.psl) /cubemath.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/cubemath.pdf) % entered during GG 59 /imbz4p01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/imbz4p01.psl) /cubemath.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/cubemath.pdf) /bernstein (http://graphics.idav.ucdavis.edu/education/CAGDNotes/Bernstein-Polynomials.pdf) /ellipse4.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/ellipse4.psl) /wnhsl (http://www.tinaja.com/whatnu05.asp#hsl) /stalac.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/stalac.pdf) /santa01 (http://www.tinaja.com/santa01.asp) /imxytab.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/imxytab.psl) /nonlingr.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/nonlingr.pdf) /unibmm01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/unibm01.psl) /webimage.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/webimage.pdf) /keycor01.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/keycor01.pdf) /nubkg01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/nubkg01.psl) /basis.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/basis.pdf) /fixtlt01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/fixtlt01.psl) /swingt01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/swingt01.psl) /perspec1.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/perspec1.pdf) /starwars.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/starwars.psl) /video901.jpg (http://www.tinaja.com/images/bargs/finalc9.jpg) /video901.bmp (http://www.tinaja.com/images/bargs/finalc9.bmp) /autobmf1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/autobmf1.psl) /bmfauto1.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/bmfauto1.pdf) /autobm1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/autobmf1.psl) /bmdemo1.bmp (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/bmdemo1.bmp) /adobeifilter (http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/product.jsp?product=1&platform=Windows) /myriadfont (http://store.adobe.com/type/browser/P/P_1706.html) /stonefont (http://store.adobe.com/type/browser/F/STAQ/F_STAQ-11705000.html) /cleartype (http://grc.com/cleartype.htm) /adobeacrobat (http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/main.html) /acroread (http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html) /dutchdare (http://www.darenet.nl/page/language.view/home) /sedn (news:///sci.electronics.design) /sern (news:///sci.electronics.repair) /mcmaster (http://www.mcmaster.com/ ) /smallparts (http://www.smallparts.com/ ) /grainger (http://www.grainger.com/Grainger/ ) /mouser (http://www.mouser.com/ ) /digikey (http://www.digikey.com/ ) /allied (http://www.alliedelec.com/ ) /newark (http://www.newark.com/) /thomasreg (http://www.thomasregister.com/) /whtnu05 (http://www.tinaja.com/whtnu05.asp) /refurblg.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/refurblg.pdf) /refurb.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/refurb.pdf) /advetorl.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/advetorl.pdf) /sotofamilia (http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MfcISAPICommand=ViewListedItems&userid=sotofamilia&include=0&since=7&sort=3&rows=100) /marcia.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/marcia.pdf) /auctscne.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/auctscne.pdf) /ebaysell.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/ebaysell.pdf) /ebayspoof (mailto:spoof@ebay.com) /auct01links (http://www.tinaja.com/auct01.asp#links) /enhebay2.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/enhebay2.pdf) /enhebay1.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/enhebay1.pdf) /pdfflash.pdf(http://www.tinaja.com/glib/pdfflash.pdf) /adobejava (http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/pdf/topic_js.html) /p3anim01.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/p3anim01.pdf) /xpdf (http://www.foolabs.com/xpdf/) /heapsort.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/heapsort.pdf) /strconv.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/strconv.pdf) /pdfrefman (http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/pdf/index_reference.html) /uncompresspdf.api (http://www.tinaja.com/plugins/uncompressPDF.api) /adobeebooks (http://www.adobe.com/epaper/ebooks/main.html) /viewpdf1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/viewpdf1.psl) /adobeacrobatsdk (http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/acrobat/sdk/index_doc.html) /adobejavascriptguide (http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/acrobat/sdk/index_doc.html#js) /wordfreq.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/wordfreq.pdf) /azauct01.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/azauct01.pdf) /startsdk.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/startsdk.pdf) /flatevue.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/flatvue.pdf) /wordfrq1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/wordfrq1.psl) /otherwf (http://www.mytranslate.com/wordfrequency.htm) /homonyms (http://www.cooper.com/alan/homonym_list.html) /wrightauct (http://www.wrightbrosauctioneers.com/) /a1auct (http://www.a1auctionz.com/) /auctbroke (http://www.auctionbrokers.us/) /ronbrunk (http://www.brunksauction.com/) /americawest (http://www.yellowpages-ads.com/01231827) /azauctioneers (http://www.arizonaauctioneers.com/) /dickerson (http://www.cfdauction.com/) /wsmauct (http://www.westernsalesmanagement.com/) /asustore (http://property.asu.edu/) /uaauct (http://pacs.web.arizona.edu/pacs_home.html) /schoolauct (http://web.archive.org/web/20040229230404/http://www.dist.maricopa.edu/surplus/other.html) /haynieauct (http://www.chuckhaynieauctions.com/pages/1/index.htm) /crawfordauct (http://www.tumbleweedauction.com/) /mangold (http://www.azauctioneers.org/members/8402_OCMangold.asp) /tingle (http://brucetingleauctioneering.com/) /countass (http://www.soldyourway.com/) /southwestliq (http://www.swliquidators.com/) /maricopacoll (http://www.dist.maricopa.edu/surplus/) /sierraauct (http://www.sierraauction.com/) /cunninghamauct (http://www.auctionaz.com/) /auctappr (http://www.auctionandappraise.com/) /azauctionassn (http://www.azauctioneers.org/home.asp) /natauctionassn (http://www.auctioneers.org/) /azclassifieds (http://www.arizclassified.com/classifieds/index.inn) /azrepublic (http://www.azcentral.com/class/merch/) /tudailystar (http://classified.tucson.com/index.php?site_name=citizen) /enhebay1.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/enhebay1.pdf) /busonly.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/busonly.psl) /rebound1.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/rebound1.psl) /rebound1.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/rebound1.pdf) /funfield.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/funfield.pdf) /psar2img.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/psar2img.pdf) /dovebid (http://www.dovebid.com) /michaelfox (http://www.michaelfox.com) /mjauctions (http://www.mjauctions.com) /ucc (http://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/) /arizlaw (http://www.azleg.state.az.us/ArizonaRevisedStatutes.asp) /vickrey (http://www.vanderbilt.edu/econ/reiley/papers/VickreyHistory.pdf) /whtnu04 (http://www.tinaja.com/whtnu04.asp) /logrpt01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/logrpt01.psl) /nutilt01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/nutilt01.psl) /nubkg01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/nubkg01.psl) /dodbur01.psl (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/dodbur01.psl) /ebayphen.pdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/ebayphen.pdf) /gallery.pdf 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(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3D075062986X/donlancastersgurA/002-0496817-3688016) /hack64 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/hack64.pdf) /nss (http://www.caves.org) /sinquest (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/sinquest.pdf) /askguru (http://www.tinaja.com/glair01.asp) /assycb (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3D0672223317/donlancastersgurA/002-3338585-9572047) /muse105 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/muse105.pdf) /muse107 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/muse107.pdf) /resbn90 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/resbn90.pdf) /hackar3 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/hackar3.pdf) /testdemo (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/FULL60-1.ASC) /mschips (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/mschips.pdf) /sigview (http://www.sigview.com) /ggsigview (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/sigview.pdf) /mock (http://www.technicalworks.com) /xtronics (http://www.xtronics.com/) /oshen (http://www.oshonsoft.com/pic.html) /heapps01 (http://www.tinaja.com/psutils/heapps01.psl) /distlangpdf (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/distlang.pdf) /strconv 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(http://www.tinaja.com/info01.asp) /gurgrm01 (http://www.tinaja.com/gurgrm01.asp) /energfun (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/energfun.pdf) { /tilley (http://www.tilleyfoundation.com) /mnglobal (http://www.mnglobal.com/energy/pg2.htm) /keely (http://www.keelynet.com) /evolve (http://www.evolvedtechnology.com) /hack64 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/hack64.pdf) /hackar3 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/hackar3.pdf) /resbn58 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/resbn58.pdf) /bppt (http://www.batterypoweronline.com) /muse112 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/muse112.pdf) /muse113 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/muse113.pdf) /energfun (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/energfun.pdf) /bashpseu (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/bashpseu.pdf) /adobe (http://www.adobe.com) /netscape (http://www.netscape.com) /gallypsl (http://www.tinaja.com/galley1.psl) /gallypdf (http://www.tinaja.com/galley1.pdf) /atn5150 (http://partners.adobe.com/asn/developer/acrosdk/docs/createpdfapi/pdfmarkReference.pdf) /nutour (http://www.tinaja.com/bargains/nutour02.pdf) /nutoursource (http://www.tinaja.com/bargains/nutour02.psl) /bwhistle (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/bwhistle.pdf) /gonzo1 (http://www.tinaja.com/post01.asp#gonzo) /barg01 (http://www.tinaja.com/barg01.asp) /weblib01 (http://www.tinaja.com/weblib01.asp) /gurgrm01 (http://www.tinaja.com/gurgrm01.asp) /z1 (http://www.tinaja.com/bargains/thumb/albradz2.jpg) /z2 (http://www.tinaja.com/bargains/sbtesteq.asp) /z3 (http://www.tinaja.com/images/bargs/albrad02.jpg) /z4 (http://www.tinaja.com/bargains/thumb/tutenaz2.jpg) /z5 (http://www.tinaja.com/bargains/sbphone.asp) /z6 (http://www.tinaja.com/images/bargs/tutena02.jpg) /sourceme (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/gallery.psl) /sourceme2 (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/autourl.psl) } pop >> {mark exch /eurl cvx ] cvx def} forall %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% New colorizer patches %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /boxgrays 0.899 def /grayshade boxgrays def /mastergray boxgrays def /staytint {0.33 setgray} def /staytint1 {0.25 setgray} def /showadgrays true def /red {0 settint} def /Zmacro {staytint /ypos ypos 2 add def 72 300 div setlinewidth xpos ypos moveto txtwide 0 rlineto stroke /ypos ypos -2 add def tintoff} def % hair rule /amacro {(zy0) stringmacro /ypos ypos ypara add def 0.33 setgray } def % start drop cap /bmacro {(iFy1) stringmacro /ypos ypos ypara add def black} def % finish drop cap % Gonzo character colorizer /blueon {mark /blue cvx 0.33 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /blueoff {mark /beige cvx 0 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton {mark 0.33 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1 {mark 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1b {mark beige cvx % try for aqua after url??? 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1a {mark /aqua cvx % try for aqua after url??? 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1p {mark /burple cvx % try for aqua after url??? 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1r {mark /red cvx % try for aqua after url??? 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1a {mark /aqua cvx % try for aqua after url??? 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tinton1b {mark /beige cvx % try for beige after url??? 0.25 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def /tintoff {mark 0 /setgray cvx] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put exch 1 add exch} def %%%%%%%%%%%%%% COMPACT VERSION OF COLORIZER II %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /settint {dup /currenttint exch store 5.999 mul dup floor cvi /&cbar exch store dup floor sub /&cwt exch store [ {/setgray [ /dup cvx 0.3 &cwt 0.59 mul add /ge cvx [1 /exch cvx &cwt 0.59 mul 0.30 add /sub cvx 1 &cwt sub 0.59 mul 0.11 add /div cvx /dup cvx 1 &cwt sub /mul cvx &cwt /add cvx /exch cvx ] cvx [ &cwt 0.59 mul 0.3 add /div cvx /dup cvx &cwt /mul cvx 0] cvx /ifelse cvx /setrgbcolor cvx] cvx /def cvx} {/setgray [/dup cvx 0.59 1 &cwt sub 0.3 mul add /ge cvx [1 &cwt sub 0.3 mul 0.59 add /sub cvx &cwt 0.3 mul 0.11 add /div cvx /dup cvx &cwt /mul cvx 1 &cwt sub /add cvx /exch cvx 1 /exch cvx] cvx [1 &cwt sub 0.3 mul 0.59 add /div cvx /dup cvx 1 &cwt sub /mul cvx /exch cvx 0] cvx /ifelse cvx /setrgbcolor cvx] cvx /def cvx} {/setgray [/dup cvx 0.59 &cwt 0.11 mul add /ge cvx [&cwt 0.11 mul 0.59 add /sub cvx 1 &cwt sub 0.11 mul 0.30 add /div cvx /dup cvx 1 &cwt sub /mul cvx &cwt /add cvx 1 /exch cvx] cvx [0 /exch cvx &cwt 0.11 mul 0.59 add /div cvx /dup cvx &cwt /mul cvx] cvx /ifelse cvx /setrgbcolor cvx] cvx /def cvx} {/setgray [/dup cvx 0.59 1 &cwt sub mul 0.11 add /ge cvx [1 &cwt sub 0.59 mul 0.11 add /sub cvx &cwt 0.59 mul 0.30 add /div cvx /dup cvx &cwt /mul cvx 1 &cwt sub /add cvx 1] cvx [0 /exch cvx 1 &cwt sub 0.59 mul 0.11 add /div cvx /dup cvx 1 &cwt sub /mul cvx /exch cvx] cvx /ifelse cvx /setrgbcolor cvx] cvx /def cvx} {/setgray [/dup cvx 0.11 &cwt 0.30 mul add /ge cvx[&cwt 0.30 mul 0.11 add /sub cvx 1 &cwt sub 0.30 mul 0.59 add /div cvx /dup cvx 1 &cwt sub /mul cvx &cwt /add cvx /exch cvx 1] cvx [ &cwt 0.30 mul 0.11 add /div cvx /dup cvx &cwt /mul cvx /exch cvx 0 /exch cvx ] cvx /ifelse cvx /setrgbcolor cvx ] cvx /def cvx} {/setgray [ /dup cvx 0.30 1 &cwt sub 0.11 mul add /ge cvx[ 1 /exch cvx 1 &cwt sub 0.11 mul 0.30 add /sub cvx &cwt 0.11 mul 0.59 add /div cvx /dup cvx &cwt /mul cvx 1 &cwt sub /add cvx ] cvx [ 1 &cwt sub 0.11 mul 0.30 add /div cvx /dup cvx 1 &cwt sub /mul cvx 0 /exch cvx] cvx /ifelse cvx /setrgbcolor cvx ] cvx /def cvx} ] &cbar get exec exec} bind def /beige {0.10 settint} def % examples of convenience operators /aqua {0.52 settint} def /blue {0.67 settint} def /lime {0.44 settint} def /burple {0.75 settint} def %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /guru { gonzo begin ps.util.1 begin printerror nuisance begin} def % guru % activate gonzo utilities 50 50 10 setgrid % create grid % 56 61 showgrid /setpagefonts { /cstretch 0.015 def /sstretch 0.015 def /font0 /StoneSans-Bold 1.6 gonzofont /font1 /StoneSans 0.95 gonzofont /font2 /StoneSans [0.95 0 0.25 0.95 0 0 ] gonzofont /font4 /StoneSans 0.85 gonzofont /font3 /StoneSans-Bold 0.85 gonzofont /font6 /StoneSans-Bold 0.85 gonzofont /font7 /StoneSans-Bold 1.05 gonzofont % subheaders /font8 /StoneSans-Bold [0.65 0 0 0.65 0 0.4] gonzofont /txtwide 36 store /yinc 1.2 store /kern 0.1 store /pm 1.5 store aqua 0.33 setgray font1 black /amacro { mark /aqua cvx 0.33 /setgray cvx ] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch % stuff into gonzo printlist put exch 1 add exch } def /bmacro { mark /black cvx ] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch % stuff into gonzo printlist put exch 1 add exch } def /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store} def /texttop 51 store /textleft 3 store /cmacro {aqua 0.25 setgray (znhL7) stringmacro /xpos xpos 1.7 sub store /ypos ypos .1 sub def } def % left title /dmacro {black (pL1hz) stringmacro /xpos xpos 1.7 add store /ypos ypos .1 add def} def % normal text after centered title /fmacro % try and fake | {mark /gsave cvx /currentpoint cvx /moveto cvx 0.1 /setlinewidth cvx 0 0.65 /rlineto cvx /stroke cvx /grestore cvx ] cvx printlist exch 3 index exch put % stuff into gonzo printlist exch 1 add exch % increment gonzo list count } def } def setpagefonts % -2 50.5 (optional header here \274) cl %% Set document opening conventions. Note DOCVIEW limited. [/CropBox [0 0 520 620] % set the wierd size /PAGES pdfmark [ {Catalog} << /ViewerPreferences << /FitWindow true /CenterWindow true >> /PageLayout /OneColumn % continous /Pagemode /UseNone % no thumbs /View [/XYZ null null 1 ] % force 100% >> /PUT pdfmark %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% page manager /pagenum 1 store /startnewpage { black beige 0.35 setgray 21 -2.5 (|3\320|j|j) ggnum 10 string cvs mergestr (|j.|j) mergestr pagenum 10 string cvs mergestr (|j|j\320) mergestr cc aqua showpage %% start next page /pagenum pagenum 1 add store 50 50 10 setgrid % create grid setpagefonts font1 textleft texttop } def /su {surl font6} store /to {tinton1 font6} store /tx {tintoff font1} store /tabs [7 20] store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % //// REVISED DIPDRAW PROC ///// electronics begin % dipdraw - draws a dip integrated circuit. (old code to be improved) % Enter with currentpoint set to pin 1 and scale % set so that 1.0 = distance between pins. Then % do a numpins-(name)-(hipins)-(lopins) dipdraw % Pin callouts preceeded by / will be complemented. % main dipdraw entry: /dipdraw { save /dipsnap exch def /hipins exch def /lopins exch def /chipname exch def /numpins exch def mark 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 % temp patch /howlong {numpins 2 div cvi 1 add} def /howhigh {4 numpins 36 ge {1 add} if} def /stub {howhigh 1.4 sub 2 div} def % internal service subs start here: /pinproc {numpins 2 div cvi{newpath 0 cpos 0.37 0 360 arc gsave 1 setgray fill grestore 0.067 setlinewidth stroke pin# 5 string cvs dup stringwidth pop 2 div neg cpos 0.2 sub moveto show 1 0 translate /pin# pin# dir add def} repeat } def /stretchprint { dup stringwidth pop 2 div neg exch length 1 sub stretch mul 2 div sub 0 moveto callout (/) anchorsearch true eq {currentpoint exch stretch add exch moveto pop dup /callout exch def stringwidth pop callout length 1 sub stretch mul add /barwide exch def 0.033 setlinewidth gsave currentpoint 0.55 add moveto barwide 0 rlineto stroke grestore} if stretch 0 callout ashow pop} def /pincallouts{0 vpos translate {workstring ( ) search true eq {/callout exch def pop /workstring exch def callout stretchprint 1 0 translate}{dup /callout exch def stretchprint exit } ifelse}loop} def % actual dipdraw process starts here: % ........ the outline: gsave 1 setlinecap 1 setlinejoin currentpoint translate newpath -1 howhigh 2 div 0.7 -90 90 arc 0 stub rlineto howlong 0 rlineto 0 howhigh neg rlineto howlong neg 0 rlineto closepath gsave grayshade setgray fill grestore grayshade dup 1 ne {0.33}{0} ifelse setgray 0.36 setlinewidth stroke newpath -.55 .45 0.15 0 360 arc fill black % ........ pin circles and numbers: /Helvetica-Bold findfont [0.4 0 0 0.55 0 0] makefont setfont gsave /pin# 1 def /dir 1 def /cpos 0 def pinproc grestore gsave /pin# numpins def /dir -1 def /cpos howhigh def pinproc grestore % pin callouts: /Helvetica findfont [0.35 0 0 0.6 0 0] makefont setfont /stretch 0.033 def gsave /workstring hipins def /vpos 0.6 def pincallouts grestore gsave /workstring lopins def /vpos howhigh 1.05 sub def pincallouts grestore % device number: grayshade 1 ne {0.33}{0} ifelse setgray /Helvetica-Bold findfont [1.4 0 0 1 0 0] makefont setfont /stretch 0.05 def gsave numpins 2 div 1 sub 2 div howhigh 2 div 0.33 sub translate chipname dup /callout exch def stretchprint grestore black % end cleanup: grestore grestore cleartomark dipsnap restore} def end % get out of electronics? %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Burplebox routines /burpwide 29.5 store /burpcom {save /burpx exch store /bht exch store save /burp1 exch store xpos ypos translate -1 .2 mt bht yinc mul .4 add pd burpwide pr bht yinc mul .4 add pu closepath 0.9 setgray fill burp1 restore} store /burpwidew 32 store /burpcomw {save /burpx exch store /bht exch store save /burp1 exch store xpos 1 sub ypos translate 0 .2 mt bht yinc mul .4 add pd burpwidew pr bht yinc mul .4 add pu closepath 0.9 setgray fill burp1 restore} store { /burplebox1 {1.5 burpcom} store /burplebox1.5 {2 burpcom} store /burplebox2 {2.5 burpcom} store /burplebox2.5 {3 burpcom} store /burplebox3 {3.5 burpcom} store /burplebox3.5 {4 burpcom} store /burplebox4 {4.5 burpcom} store /burplebox4.5 {5 burpcom} store /burplebox5 {5.5 burpcom} store /burplebox5.5 {6 burpcom} store /burplebox6 {6.5 burpcom} store /burplebox6.5 {7 burpcom} store /burplebox7 {7.5 burpcom} store /burplebox7.5 {8 burpcom} store /burplebox8 {8.5 burpcom} store /burplebox8.5 {9 burpcom} store /burplebox9 {9.5 burpcom} store /burplebox9.5 {10 burpcom} store /burplebox10 {10.5 burpcom} store /burplebox10.5 {11 burpcom} store /burplebox11 {11.5 burpcom} store /burplebox11.5 {12 burpcom} store /burplebox12 {12.5 burpcom} store /burplebox11w {11.5 burpcomw} store /burplebox12.5 {13 burpcom} store /burplebox13 {13.5 burpcom} store /burplebox13.5 {14 burpcom} store /burplebox14 {14.5 burpcom} store /burplebox14.5 {15 burpcom} store /burplebox15{15.5 burpcom} store /burplebox15.5{16 burpcom} store /burplebox16 {16.5 burpcom} store /burplebox16.5 {17 burpcom} store /burplebox17 {17.5 burpcom} store /burplebox17.5 {18 burpcom} store /burplebox18 {18.5 burpcom} store /burplebox18.5 {19 burpcom} store /burplebox19 {19.5 burpcom} store /burplebox19.5 {20 burpcom} store /burplebox20 {20.5 burpcom} store /burplebox21.5 {22 burpcom} store /burplebox22{22.5 burpcom} store /burplebox22.5 {23 burpcom} store /burplebox23 {23.5 burpcom} store /burplebox23.5 {24 burpcom} store /burplebox24{24.5 burpcom} store /burplebox25{25.5 burpcom} store /burplebox25.5{26 burpcom} store /burplebox27{27.5 burpcom} store /burplebox28 {28.5 burpcom} store /burplebox28.5 {29 burpcom} store /burplebox30 {30.5 burpcom} store /burplebox31 {31.5 burpcom} store /burplebox31.5 {32 burpcom} store /burplebox33.5 {34 burpcom} store /burplebox34 {34.5 burpcom} store /burplebox38 {38.5 burpcom} store /burplebox38.5{39 burpcom} store /burplebox40{40.5 burpcom} store /burplebox40.5{41 burpcom} store /burplebox41.5{42 burpcom} store /burplebox42 {42.5 burpcom} store /burplebox42.5{43 burpcom} store % nearly a full page /burplebox43 {43.5 burpcom} store } pop 1 1 50 {cvi /size exch store % make all the burpleboxes (burplebox) size 20 string cvs mergestr cvn mark size 0.5 add /burpcom cvx ] cvx store (burplebox) size 0.5 add 20 string cvs mergestr cvn mark size 1 add /burpcom cvx ] cvx store } for /burplebox34w{34.5 burpcomw} store /burplebox34.5w{35 burpcomw} store /burplebox38w{38.5 burpcomw} store /burplebox38.5w{39 burpcomw} store /burplebox40w{40.5 burpcomw} store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % New sequence of auto positioning figures... % combined autopos jpeg conversion and hotlink: /autoimageandlink1 {save /af1 exch store xpos ypos yinc add translate 8.5 0.65 683 794 .025 % xpos ypos xres yres pixscale (http://www.tinaja.com/images/bargs/hpexcb01.jpg) % url first (C:\\Documents and Settings\\don\\Desktop\\aarawpix\\hpexcb01.jpg) jpegimageprocwithlink af1 restore} store /autoimageandlink2 {save /af2 exch store xpos ypos yinc add translate 8.5 -2 790 672 .020 % xpos ypos xres yres pixscale (http://www.tinaja.com/images/bargs/tek40841.jpg) % url first (C:\\windows\\desktop\\aaraw_pix\\tek40841.jpg) jpegimageprocwithlink af2 restore} store /jpegimageprocwithlink { % hoffset voffset hres vres save /snap2 exch def /infilename exch store % grab passed pix file /inurllink exch store % grab link filename /photoscale exch store /vpixels exch store /hpixels exch store translate % adjust position for final figure ??? inurllink setareaurl % autolink sizing /DeviceRGB setcolorspace % pick color model 0 0 translate % set page position hpixels vpixels scale % magnify unit square photoscale dup scale /infile infilename (r) file def % establish input read file /Data {infile /DCTDecode filter} def % define a data source << % start image dicationary /ImageType 1 % always one /Width hpixels % JPEG width in pixels /Height vpixels % JPEG height in pixels /ImageMatrix [hpixels 0 0 vpixels neg 0 vpixels ] /DataSource Data % proc to get filtered JPEG /BitsPerComponent 8 % color resolution /Decode [0 1 0 1 0 1] % per red book 4.10 >> image % call the image operator ypos snap2 restore /ypos exch def } def /setareaurl { % for auto include routine /cururlname exch store mark % start pdfmark /Rect [ 0 0 hpixels photoscale mul vpixels photoscale mul ] /Border [ 0 0 0] % [0 0 0 ] = none; [0 0 2] = debug /Color [ .7 0 0 ] /Action <> /Subtype /Link /ANN % annotation type pdfmark % call pdf operators } def %%%%%%%%%%%%% ordinary tracking figures /autofig1 { /figadvance 13 store save /snap1 exch store xpos 2 add ypos figadvance sub translate figure1 snap1 restore /ypos ypos figadvance sub yinc sub store } store /autofig2 { /figadvance 13 store save /snap2 exch store xpos 2 add ypos figadvance sub translate figure1 snap2 restore /ypos ypos figadvance sub yinc sub store } store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% fixed position figures here %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /figure1 {0 0 mt 10 pu 10 pr 10 pd closepath fill} store % temp tester /figure1 { save /f1snap exch store mark 5 12.2 translate -55 rotate 0.09 dup scale -100 -100 translate /solvexy {/ff exch store % grab values - not optimized /ee exch store /dd exch store /cc exch store /bb exch store /aa exch store cc aa dd div ff mul sub bb aa ee mul dd div sub div /yy exch store /xx cc bb yy mul sub aa div store xx yy } store /bez4ptsx1 {aload pop % unpack array /y3 exch store /x3 exch store % stash data. Strange /y5 exch store /x5 exch store % numbering is in use /y4 exch store /x4 exch store /y0 exch store /x0 exch store % find the chords /c1 x4 x0 sub dup mul y4 y0 sub dup mul add sqrt store /c2 x5 x4 sub dup mul y5 y4 sub dup mul add sqrt store /c3 x3 x5 sub dup mul y3 y5 sub dup mul add sqrt store % guess at the best t values % /t1 c1 dup c2 add c3 add div store % /t2 c1 c2 add dup c3 add div store /b0 {1 exch sub dup dup mul mul} store /b1 {dup 1 exch sub dup mul mul 3 mul} store /b2 {dup 1 exch sub exch dup mul mul 3 mul} store /b3 {dup dup mul mul} store % ai + bj = k t1 b1 t1 b2 x4 x0 t1 b0 mul sub x3 t1 b3 mul sub t2 b1 t2 b2 x5 x0 t2 b0 mul sub x3 t2 b3 mul sub solvexy /x2 exch store /x1 exch store t1 b1 t1 b2 y4 y0 t1 b0 mul sub y3 t1 b3 mul sub t2 b1 t2 b2 y5 y0 t2 b0 mul sub y3 t2 b3 mul sub solvexy /y2 exch store /y1 exch store x0 y0 moveto x1 y1 x2 y2 x3 y3 curveto } def /data [100 100 180 120 270 190 320 100 sub 300] store % /data [100 100 200 120 300 190 200.24 300] store /bdot {gsave 16 dup scale 0 0 dot grestore} store /bdot8 {gsave 6 dup scale 0 0 dot grestore} store data 0 get data 1 get mt bdot data 2 get data 3 get mt bdot data 4 get data 5 get mt bdot data 6 get data 7 get mt bdot /t1 0.33 store /t2 0.67 store 100 100 moveto % demo - comment before use data bez4ptsx1 0.35 setlinewidth stroke true { 1 0 0 setrgbcolor /t1 0.28 store /t2 0.72 store 100 100 moveto % demo - comment before use data bez4ptsx1 0.35 setlinewidth stroke 0 0 1 setrgbcolor /t1 0.37 store /t2 0.63 store 100 100 moveto % demo - comment before use data bez4ptsx1 0.35 setlinewidth stroke } if cleartomark f1snap restore } store /figure1 { save /f1snap exch store 5 -7.5 translate 0.1 dup scale /dots [0.0 0.0 0.264953 1.54495 0.604746 3.07298 1.03917 4.57484 1.59717 6.03836 2.31306 7.42849 3.22877 8.69581 4.37073 9.76335 5.71563 10.5583 7.19172 11.074 8.7265 11.3795 10.2797 11.5763 11.8334 11.7684 13.371 12.0601 14.8541 12.5554 16.2111 13.3298 17.3652 14.3824 18.2898 15.6429 19.0102 17.0323 19.5673 18.4938 20.0 20.0] store 0 0 10 setgrid 20 20 showgrid /x0 0 store /y0 0 store /x1 3 store /y1 20 store /x2 16 store /y2 4 store /x3 20 store /y3 20 store x0 y0 moveto x1 y1 x2 y2 x3 y3 curveto black line1 stroke 0 1 20 {2 mul /jj exch store dots jj get dots jj 1 add get mt dot } for f1snap restore } store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% special figure one for gg61 book layout /figure1 { save /f1xsnap exch store gsave % temp 10.2 0.8 translate 0.4 dup scale % adjust fit on page % add an active link for expandion temporary /cururlname (http://www.tinaja.com/glib/loglog01.pdf) store mark % start pdfmark /Rect [ 0 0 30 30 ] /Border [ 0 0 0] % [0 0 0 ] = none; [0 0 2] = debug /Color [ .7 0 0 ] /Action <> /Subtype /Link /ANN % annotation type pdfmark % call pdf operators % Custom Engineering Graphs: A log log display % ================================== % by Don Lancaster % Copyright c 2006 by Don Lancaster & Synergetics, Box 809, Thatcher, AZ, 85552 % (928) 428-4073 Email: don@tinaja.com Website: http://www.tinaja.com % Consulting services available http://www.tinaja.com/info01.html % All commercial rights and all electronic media rights ~fully~ reserved. % Linking usually welcome. Reposting expressly forbidden. Version 1.1 % An example of using my Gonzo Utilities to do a custom engineering graph. % Detailed example does a scatterplot on a 3x3 log graph. % IMPORTANT NOTE: Don Lancaster's file gonzo.ps is required for this program. % This may be freely downloaded from http://www.tinaja.com/post01.asp#gonzo % To activate after obvious location mods, uncomment ONE of the following two lines: % (C:\\Documents and Settings\\don\\Desktop\\gonzo\\gonzo.ps) run % use internal gonzo % (A:\\gonzo.ps) run % use external gonzo % Plus the next line when Gonzo is to be activated... % gonzo begin ps.util.1 begin nuisance begin % NOTE THAT ALL PS FILENAME STRINGS !!!DEMAND!!! DOUBLE REVERSE SLASHES. % To use this program, you modify your values and save it as an ordinary ASCII % textfile. That file is then sent to Acrobat Distiller for coversion to a .PDF % file format. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%% Fixzed Input Data %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /backgroundcolor {0.8 1 1} store % background color of graph /graphlinecolor {0 0.8 0.8}store % line color of graph /datadotcolor {0.3 0.3 0.3} store % dot color % loglines establishes the fine line detail of the log plots % always refers to a 1,1 lower left axis and NOT to the actual % scaled data values /loglines [ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 ] store /xdatascale 1.0 store % scale factor to make left data = 1 /ydatascale 10 store % scale factor to make bottom data = 1 /xaxisname (TREES PER ACRE) store % x axis label /yaxisname (TREE DIAMETER IN INCHES) store % y axis label /xnums [1 10 100 1000] store % scaled x axis data /ynums [.1 1.0 10 100] store % scaled y axis data /maintitle (HULAPAI TIMBER ALLOTMENT\n( T20N R15E ) ) store % main title % /inputdata may be cut and pasted here or run as a separate textfile % below. Format is an array of [ x0, y0, x1, y1, .... xn, yn ] data % values. Limited to a maximum of 32767 data value pairs. Data is % ACTUAL values, not graph scaled ones. /inputdata [ 3.0634 0.3678 3 3 3 30 30 0.4 30 4 30 40 300 0.5 300 5 300 50 100 {90 random 10 add 90 random 10 add 10 div } repeat % fake some dense data ] store % Note: fonts must be defined BELOW and AFTER grid is established. % Availability of STONE font is recommended for this demo. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%% File Read Input Data %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % Any and all of the above data may optionally be read from a textfile. % If used, be sure to use a DOUBLE reverse % slash every time you want a single one in a PostScript string. % Be sure to provide complete, correct, and accurate location for access. % /datafilename (C:\\Documents and Settings\\don\\Desktop\\trees\\tree1.txt) store % Uncomment the following line ONLY if external data is to be disk read... % datafilename run % run additional data from external file. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%% Low Level Graph Creating Code %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % /makeagrid establishes the grid size. Each 10 x 10 area will be one % decade. Also puts down edges and background of log display area /makeagrid { % 100 100 10 setgrid % establish xposn yposn size grid /cstretch 0.01 store % adjust font to grid /sstretch 0.01 store backgroundcolor setrgbcolor % paint background. Comment out 0 0 mt 30 pu 30 pr 30 pd % or use [1 1 1] for white closepath fill graphlinecolor setrgbcolor % paint decades heavier line2 1 setlinecap 1 setlinejoin [ {-0.3 0 mt 30.3 r}10 4 ] yrpt % [{action} spacing repeats ] [ {0 -0.3 mt 30.3 u}10 4 ] xrpt } store % /make3x3log provides the inside detail for the log graphs. Both axes % done separately just in case semilog is later needed /make3x3log { line1 % thin line 0 1 loglines length 1 sub % draw verticals {/ptr exch store loglines ptr get log 10 mul 0 mt 30 u } for 0 1 loglines length 1 sub % draw horizontals {/ptr exch store loglines ptr get 0 exch log 10 mul mt 30 r } for } store % /plotdata scales and plots the data points from the inputdata array /plotdata { datadotcolor setrgbcolor % set dot color 0 2 inputdata length 2 sub % go through plotdata list {/ptr1 exch store % save location inputdata ptr1 get % get x value xdatascale mul log 10 mul inputdata ptr1 1 add get % get y value ydatascale mul log 10 mul mt dot % and plot dot } for } store % /addaxis lables the axes /addaxis { /font1 /StoneSans-Bold 0.85 gonzofont % numeric value font /font2 /StoneSans-Bold 1.2 gonzofont % title value font font1 % pick numeric font black % and color 0 1 xnums length 1 sub { % show the x axis nums /ptr2 exch store ptr2 10 mul -1.5 xnums ptr2 get 20 string cvs cc } for 0 1 ynums length 1 sub { % show the y axis nums /ptr2 exch store -0.9 ptr2 10 mul 0.3 sub ynums ptr2 get 20 string cvs cr } for font2 15 -3.5 xaxisname cc gsave -3.5 15 translate 90 rotate 0 0 yaxisname cc grestore } store % /addboiler provides the main graph name, can later extensively annotate. /addboiler { /font3 /StoneSans-Bold 2 gonzofont % title value font font3 /yinc 2.2 store 15 35 maintitle cc % print main title } store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%% High Level Graph Creating Code %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % This routine combines the needed steps for the complete log log plot. /makealogloggraph { makeagrid % sets up grid make3x3log % draws log graph addaxis % letters the axes plotdata % plots data points addboiler % adds title and desc } store % temp defaults. uncomment for debug % /make3x3log {} store % /addaxis {} store % /plotdata {} store /addboiler {} store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%% Actual Graph Creator %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % This routine actually draws the graph makealogloggraph grestore % undo translate and page positioning f1xsnap restore } store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% specific to gg65 ms executive summary %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%% specific figures for append %%%%%%%%%%%%%% /ms0360 { save /snapxx exch store 5 -0.35 translate % reposition absolute on page 0.76 dup scale /hh {32 mul 90 div 0.78 mul } store /uu 12.5 store /posninc 90 7.5 div store /p1s 11.086 store % best efficiency leans /p1e 12.913 store /p2s 22.211 store /p2e 25.788 store /p3s 33.416 store /p3e 38.583 store /p4s 44.733 store /p4e 51.266 store /p5s 56.192 store /p5e 63.807 store /p6s 67.819 store /p6e 76.180 store /p7s 79.628 store /p7e 88.371 store /msinplot {gsave translate 0.5 0 0.5 setrgbcolor line1 gsave % [{0 12 moveto 0.8 u} posninc hh 8] xrpt grestore 0 0 mt p1s hh pr uu pu p1e p1s sub hh pr uu pd p2s p1e sub hh pr uu pu p2e p2s sub hh pr uu pd p3s p2e sub hh pr uu pu p3e p3s sub hh pr uu pd p4s p3e sub hh pr uu pu p4e p4s sub hh pr uu pd p5s p4e sub hh pr uu pu p5e p5s sub hh pr uu pd p6s p5e sub hh pr uu pu p6e p6s sub hh pr uu pd p7s p6e sub hh pr uu pu p7e p7s sub hh pr uu pd 90 p7e sub hh pr gsave 0 0.83 0.83 setrgbcolor fill grestore line3 1 setlinecap 1 setlinejoin 0 0.33 0.33 setrgbcolor stroke grestore} store 0.8 1 scale % 40 100 showgrid /lilplot0 {gsave translate 0.5 0.5 scale 0 0 msinplot grestore} store /lilplot1 {gsave translate -0.5 0.5 scale 0 0 msinplot grestore} store /lilplot2 {gsave translate 0.5 -0.5 scale 0 0 msinplot grestore} store /lilplot3 {gsave translate -0.5 -0.5 scale 0 0 msinplot grestore} store 0 10 lilplot0 25 10 lilplot1 24.5 10 lilplot2 49.5 10 lilplot3 snapxx restore } store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /spectrumplot {save /snap3 exch store /cstretch 0.01 store /sstretch 0.01 store /font0 /StoneSans-Bold 1.2 gonzofont /font1 /StoneSans-Bold 1 gonzofont font1 /kern 0.1 store /yinc 1.1 store 7.5 5.8 translate % adjust position 0.7 dup scale gsave 0.75 1 1 setrgbcolor 0 0 mt 15 pu 36.5 pr 15 pd closepath fill grestore % 33 13 showgrid % uncomment to view gsave line1 [{0 0 mt 0.3 d} 2 19] xrpt grestore gsave line1 [{-0.4 3 mt 36.9 r} 3 5] yrpt grestore line1 36.5 0 mt 15 u 0 1 1 setrgbcolor 0 setlinecap line1 0.5 0 mt 15 pu 1 pr 15 pd gsave closepath fill grestore 0 0.33 0.33 setrgbcolor stroke 1 0 1 setrgbcolor 28.5 0 mt 4.2 pu 1 pr 4.2 pd gsave closepath fill grestore 0.33 0 0.33 setrgbcolor stroke 1 0 1 setrgbcolor 30.5 0 mt 2.25 pu 1 pr 2.25 pd gsave closepath fill grestore 0.33 0 0.33 setrgbcolor stroke 1 0 1 setrgbcolor 32.5 0 mt 3 pu 1 pr 3 pd gsave closepath fill grestore 0.33 0 0.33 setrgbcolor stroke 1 0 1 setrgbcolor 34.5 0 mt 0.5 pu 1 pr 0.5 pd gsave closepath fill grestore 0.33 0 0.33 setrgbcolor stroke black % /font1 /Helvetica 0.8 gonzofont font1 font1 /yinc 2 store /kern 0.1 store gsave 1.45 -0.9 translate 90 rotate black 0 0 (1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35) cr grestore font0 0.25 dup dup setrgbcolor % temp gray 12.5 -4 (HARMONIC NUMBER) cl font1 -1 -0.3 (0.0) cr -1 2.7 (0.2) cr -1 5.7 (0.4) cr -1 8.7 (0.6) cr -1 11.7 (0.8) cr -1 14.7 (1.0) cr gsave -3.5 4.0 translate 90 rotate % black font0 0 0 (AMPLITUDE) cl grestore black line2 0 0 mt -.5 0 mt 37 r 0 -.5 mt 16 u black font1 11 12.6 ((|jbest efficiency n|j=|j28|j a|j=|j0.97|j)) cl % flashtext font0 1 0 0 setrgbcolor 15 6.65 (All Intermediate\nHarmonics are ZERO|j!!!) cc snap3 restore } store %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /plot2897 {save /snap4 exch store /cstretch 0.01 store /sstretch 0.01 store /font0 /StoneSans-Bold 1.2 gonzofont /font1 /StoneSans-Bold 1 gonzofont font1 /kern 0.1 store /yinc 1.1 store 3.2 14 translate % adjust position 0.85 dup scale %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%% pattern utilities %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% /bluerndcolor [153 215 230 40] store % random pattern colors [red blue green variance ] /slidewide 40 store /slidehigh 36.5 store /DeviceRGB setcolorspace % pick color model /hpixels 50 store % size of pattern image /vpixels 50 store /issize hpixels vpixels mul store % makestring converts a stack top array into a string... /makestring {dup length string dup /NullEncode filter 3 -1 roll {1 index exch write} forall pop} def % /buildpixels makes three nearby colors given [r b g texture] all 0-255 integers /buildpixels {aload pop /texture exch store /b0 exch store /g0 exch store /r0 exch store 123 srand /r1 r0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /g1 g0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /b1 b0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /r2 r0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /g2 g0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /b2 b0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /r3 r0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /g3 g0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store /b3 b0 texture random texture 2 div sub add cvi dup 255 ge {pop 255}if dup 0 lt {pop 0} if store } store % /makeimagestring creates a sting usable for a pattern image /makeimagestring { 12345 srand % make repeatable /iarray mark issize { r1 g1 b1} repeat ] store % fill all with color 1 issize 2 div cvi { iarray issize % fill half with color 2 random 3 mul cvi [ r2 g2 b2 ] putinterval} repeat issize 2 div cvi { iarray issize % fill third with color 3 random 3 mul cvi [ r3 g3 b3 ] putinterval} repeat iarray makestring } store % /rndimage shows the random string as a patternable image /bodyrandimage { gsave 5 dup scale << % start image dicationary /ImageType 1 % always one /Width hpixels % width in pixels /Height vpixels % height in pixels /ImageMatrix [hpixels 0 0 vpixels neg 0 vpixels ] /DataSource bodypatstring % proc to get string data /BitsPerComponent 8 % color resolution /Decode [0 1 0 1 0 1] % per red book 4.10 >> image % call the image grestore } def /accentrandimage { gsave 5 dup scale << % start image dicationary /ImageType 1 % always one /Width hpixels % width in pixels /Height vpixels % height in pixels /ImageMatrix [hpixels 0 0 vpixels neg 0 vpixels ] /DataSource accentpatstring % proc to get string data /BitsPerComponent 8 % color resolution /Decode [0 1 0 1 0 1] % per red book 4.10 >> image % call the image grestore } def % using a separate pattern dictionary for each pattern... /bodypatdict << /PatternType 1 % Tiling pattern /PaintType 1 % Colored /TilingType 1 /BBox [0 0 50 50] /XStep 5 /YStep 5 /PaintProc { begin bodyrandimage end} >> store /accentpatdict << /PatternType 1 % Tiling pattern /PaintType 1 % Colored /TilingType 1 /BBox [0 0 50 50] /XStep 5 /YStep 5 /PaintProc { begin accentrandimage end} >> store % /makepatternstrings generates the needed patterns /makepatternstrings { [230 100 230 120] pop bluerndcolor buildpixels makeimagestring /bodypatstring exch store } store bluerndcolor buildpixels makepatternstrings %%%%%%%% end pattern utils %%%%%%%% save /snap1 exch store % show the body background bodypatdict matrix % Identity matrix makepattern % Instantiate the pattern /bodypat exch def 0 0 % for the actual slide size slidewide slidehigh /Pattern setcolorspace bodypat setcolor rectfill % Fill rectangle with pattern snap1 restore %%%% end % 40 36 showgrid /cstretch 0.01 store /sstretch 0.01 store /font1 /StoneSans-Bold 0.95 gonzofont % parameter value font /font2 /StoneSans [0.85 0 0 1 0 0 ] gonzofont % numeric value font /orange { 241 255 div 158 255 div 30 255 div setrgbcolor } store /magenta { 254 255 div 156 255 div 255 236 div setrgbcolor } store /ltblue { 207 255 div 255 255 div 255 255 div setrgbcolor } store /white {1 1 1 setrgbcolor} store /lime { 54 255 div 255 255 div 52 255 div setrgbcolor } store /aqua { 102 255 div 255 255 div 201 255 div setrgbcolor } store orange %%%%%%%%%%%% orange series gsave .8 .8 translate [{orange 0 0 mt 1.7 pu 12.0 pr 1.7 pd closepath fill white 2.9 .2 mt 1.3 pu 8.2 pr 1.3 pd fill} 2.2 14] yrpt font1 0.33 dup dup setrgbcolor /dat1 [(p7e:) (p7s:) (p6e:) (p6s:) (p5e:) (p5s:) (p4e:) (p4s:) (p3e:) (p3s:) (p2e:) (p2s:) (p1e:) (p1s:)] store font1 0.12 dup dup setrgbcolor 0 1 dat1 length 1 sub {/ii exch store 1.23 0.6 ii 2.2 mul add dat1 ii get cc} for /dat2 [ (89.76625289081) (75.93480958918) (75.13315213749) (63.77803849250) (62.12795009229) (52.45588082770) (49.57368364472) (41.56706542527) (37.14383081926) (30.95837849073) (24.75285471101) (20.53940226898) (12.37453450377) (10.24045703622) ] store font2 0 1 dat2 length 1 sub {/ii exch store 3.7 0.55 ii 2.2 mul add dat2 ii get cl} for gsave 0 31.2 translate lime 0 0 mt 3.7 pu 12 pr 3.7 pd fill 13 0 mt 3.7 pu 25 pr 3.7 pd fill % right lime font1 0.12 dup dup setrgbcolor /yinc 1.2 store 6 2 (Pulse Positions\nin Degrees) cc 25 2.2 (Target Amplitude: ) cr 25 1.9 1.3 sub (Target Power: ) cr [{white 25.7 0.3 mt 1.3 pu 8.2 pr 1.3 pd fill} 1.7 2] yrpt font2 26 2.2 (0.970000000) cl 26 0.6 (0.9409 ) cl grestore % lime grestore % undo whole left %%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%% mid blue series gsave 13.8 .8 translate [{ltblue 0 0 mt 1.7 pu 12.0 pr 1.7 pd closepath fill white 2.9 .2 mt 1.3 pu 8.2 pr 1.3 pd fill} 2.2 12] yrpt font1 0.33 dup dup setrgbcolor /dat3 [(h25:) (h23:) (h21:) (h19:) (h17:) (h15:) (h13:) (h11:) (h09:) (h07:) (h05:) (h03:) ] store font1 0.12 dup dup setrgbcolor 0 1 dat3 length 1 sub {/ii exch store 1.23 0.6 ii 2.2 mul add dat3 ii get cc} for /dat4 [ (-0.00000000014) (-0.00000000032) (-0.00000000004) (-0.00000000021) (-0.00000000022) (-0.00000000002) (-0.00000000024) ( 0.00000000044) (-0.00000000022) (-0.00000000011) (-0.00000000013) (0.000000000070) ] store font2 0 1 dat4 length 1 sub {/ii exch store 3.7 0.55 ii 2.2 mul add dat4 ii get cl} for gsave % magenta series magenta [{magenta 0 26.4 mt 1.7 pu 25.0 pr 1.7 pd closepath fill} 2.2 2 ] yrpt font1 0.12 dup dup setrgbcolor 0.8 26.8 (THD ) cl 0.8 6.2 add 26.8 (is ) cl 0.8 15.3 add 26.8 (percent.) cl 0.8 26.8 2.3 add (Fundamental Amplitude:) cl white 3.2 5.2 add 26.6 mt 1.3 pu 7.2 pr 1.3 pd fill white 14.2 28.8 mt 1.3 pu 7.2 pr 1.3 pd fill % fund amp box white 3.2 26.6 mt 1.3 pu 3.2 pr 1.3 pd fill 0.12 dup dup setrgbcolor font2 3.6 26.8 (2-28) cl 8.7 26.8 (0.00000006128) cl font2 14.7 27 2.1 add (0.97000000) cl grestore % burple grestore % whole middle %%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%% right blue series gsave 26.8 .8 translate [{ltblue 0 0 mt 1.7 pu 12.0 pr 1.7 pd closepath fill white 2.9 .2 mt 1.3 pu 8.2 pr 1.3 pd fill} 2.2 12] yrpt [{aqua 0 19.8 mt 1.7 pu 12.0 pr 1.7 pd closepath fill white 2.9 20 mt 1.3 pu 8.2 pr 1.3 pd fill } 2.2 2] yrpt % emphasis font1 0.33 dup dup setrgbcolor /dat1 [(h49:) (h47:) (h45:) (h43:) (h41:) (h39:) (h37:) (h35:) (h33:) (h31:) (h29:) (h27:) ] store font1 0.12 dup dup setrgbcolor 0 1 dat1 length 1 sub {/ii exch store 1.23 0.6 ii 2.2 mul add dat1 ii get cc} for /dat6 [ (-0.00924395093) ( 0.00562585661) (-0.00342276346) ( 0.00211106203) (-0.00078946014) ( 0.00660309293) ( 0.04412815271) ( 0.17750740386) ( 0.20474366480) (-0.15202976905) (-0.28097991216) (-0.00000000009) ] store font2 0 1 dat6 length 1 sub {/ii exch store 3.7 0.55 ii 2.2 mul add dat6 ii get cl} for grestore snap4 restore } store %%%%%%%% /stalacs { %figadvance has to go in figuretwoauto save /snap3 exch def 11 10.3 translate % latest page positioner 0.8 dup scale -0.5 2.5 translate % reposition on page INTERACTS WITH FIGADVANCE 0 1 0 setrgbcolor % green grid /linestring 1000 string store /sdatproc { 0.0 0.7 0.1 setrgbcolor [ 0.4 7.33 0.38 6.36 -0.32 7.12 -0.04 7.33 -0.38 7.07 -0.07 7.26 -0.2 4.68 0.07 5.15 0.11 6.17 -0.27 4.26 0.01 6.32 -0.23 4.79 0.05 2.95 -0.29 6.05 -0.02 6.3 0.02 7.29 -0.09 7.37 -0.15 6.89 -0.12 6.19 0.16 5.06 -0.18 7.0 0.1 7.32 0.13 7.29 -0.71 7.44 -0.54 5.7 -0.26 7.38 -0.88 6.82 -0.6 4.84 -0.56 5.38 -0.29 5.67 -0.63 6.12 -0.49 7.26 -0.45 6.66 -0.17 7.01 -0.51 7.05 ] makedots 0.6 0.2 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 0.65 7.03 0.69 6.23 0.97 6.68 0.63 6.72 0.62 6.51 0.6 7.45 0.8 6.74 1.08 7.27 0.74 6.98 0.74 6.97 1.05 7.33 0.71 6.69 0.38 7.38 0.04 6.4 0.32 6.16 0.36 5.3 0.63 7.17 0.02 7.15 0.3 5.41 0.01 6.4 0.29 5.16 0.33 7.08 -0.05 7.19 0.23 7.39 0.26 5.94 0.47 5.9 0.13 7.29 0.41 5.73 0.44 7.34 0.13 6.76 0.4 5.73 0.44 6.52 0.72 7.49 0.07 7.3 0.1 7.49 0.38 4.95 0.66 7.44 ] makedots 0.6 0.4 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 1.63 6.68 0.93 5.94 1.21 6.41 1.25 7.01 0.87 6.21 0.91 6.32 1.19 5.19 1.05 5.6 1.33 6.22 1.36 5.73 0.99 5.61 1.26 7.47 1.02 4.35 1.3 2.75 1.33 6.82 0.96 6.06 1.24 6.51 1.27 6.22 1.41 6.99 0.6 6.37 0.54 6.21 0.58 6.38 0.85 6.71 0.72 6.05 0.38 7.2 0.65 5.61 0.69 4.44 0.97 5.07 0.63 5.68 0.9 7.44 0.94 7.24 ]makedots 0.0 0.6 0.5 setrgbcolor [ 1.94 5.77 2.22 6.47 1.88 6.61 2.19 7.1 1.88 6.99 1.91 7.36 2.19 7.2 1.85 6.98 1.5 6.84 1.44 7.42 1.3 6.69 1.57 6.66 1.33 7.31 1.61 4.16 1.89 6.58 1.27 6.45 1.55 4.73 1.58 6.33 1.86 6.88 1.27 6.28 1.54 5.29 1.58 5.83 1.86 7.0 1.2 7.36 1.24 7.32 1.52 4.83 1.79 7.44 1.72 6.96 1.66 7.1 1.7 7.36 1.69 7.14 1.63 6.09 0.94 7.5 1.19 7.27 ]makedots 1.0 0.0 0.9 setrgbcolor [ 2.77 7.47 2.19 5.69 2.47 6.39 2.5 5.62 2.13 6.29 2.16 4.87 2.44 3.68 2.47 6.99 2.1 6.96 2.38 7.43 2.41 6.96 2.3 7.28 2.61 6.33 2.27 5.22 2.55 4.32 2.59 6.34 2.21 6.99 2.53 6.05 1.86 5.69 2.17 7.05 1.52 7.32 1.79 5.86 1.83 4.38 2.11 5.13 1.77 6.23 1.97 7.29 1.91 7.2 1.94 4.78 2.22 5.62 2.26 7.34 1.88 6.26 1.92 7.41 2.19 6.71 ]makedots 0.3 0.5 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 3.08 6.71 3.36 7.4 3.2 6.33 3.47 7.16 3.13 7.36 3.17 7.34 3.45 6.83 3.17 7.46 3.44 7.49 3.1 7.36 2.44 7.31 2.71 7.35 2.75 4.87 3.03 7.12 2.41 7.35 2.69 5.99 2.72 7.09 2.68 6.84 2.72 7.03 2.66 6.77 2.59 7.22 2.86 4.34 3.14 6.88 3.18 7.38 2.52 6.65 2.8 5.26 2.84 5.32 3.11 6.18 2.52 7.09 2.8 6.44 2.83 5.51 3.11 6.94 2.49 7.14 2.77 4.86 2.53 7.25 2.19 7.45 2.44 6.93 ]makedots 0.0 0.5 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 3.64 7.35 3.3 7.22 3.58 6.56 3.76 7.24 3.44 6.46 3.72 7.27 3.48 7.12 3.75 5.15 3.38 7.25 3.41 4.44 3.69 3.51 3.73 5.53 4.01 7.05 3.35 6.95 3.67 5.83 3.53 6.9 3.8 6.46 3.84 6.79 3.78 6.81 3.0 7.19 2.97 6.5 3.25 7.11 3.11 6.04 3.15 6.8 3.42 6.27 3.05 6.49 3.08 3.17 3.36 4.46 3.4 6.24 3.02 5.79 3.06 6.77 3.33 6.1 3.2 6.17 3.47 7.04 3.51 7.39 3.45 7.05 2.75 7.44 ]makedots 1.0 0.1 0.3 setrgbcolor [ 4.34 6.3 4.61 7.2 4.65 7.42 4.59 7.15 4.7 7.4 3.89 7.33 3.73 6.72 4.0 3.61 4.28 6.52 4.04 7.22 4.32 6.81 3.66 6.66 3.94 5.38 3.98 5.13 4.25 6.11 3.66 7.44 3.94 6.92 3.97 5.78 4.25 7.24 3.91 5.82 4.12 5.7 4.43 7.33 4.05 6.71 4.09 5.35 4.37 6.42 4.09 6.24 4.02 6.0 4.06 7.23 4.34 7.37 3.67 6.43 3.33 7.09 3.61 7.22 3.65 7.09 3.58 7.28 3.76 7.26 3.69 7.43 ]makedots 0.0 0.7 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 4.58 7.35 4.89 6.06 4.56 6.0 4.83 5.44 4.87 6.67 4.81 7.43 5.01 7.15 4.73 7.42 5.01 5.81 4.67 5.29 4.95 4.82 4.98 4.94 5.26 6.8 4.64 7.41 4.92 5.63 4.25 6.6 4.29 7.06 4.56 6.64 4.22 4.58 4.5 5.64 4.54 6.9 4.16 7.17 4.47 7.29 4.36 7.28 4.4 6.74 4.68 6.43 4.34 3.63 4.61 5.07 4.37 7.09 4.65 5.26 4.27 6.35 4.31 5.98 4.59 5.46 4.0 7.29 ]makedots 0.4 0.3 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 5.59 6.81 5.9 6.88 5.56 7.13 5.84 6.87 5.14 5.55 5.08 7.33 5.12 6.93 5.32 7.37 4.98 6.64 5.26 3.82 5.53 6.82 5.29 6.04 5.57 5.79 4.92 6.85 5.19 5.84 5.23 3.83 5.51 5.32 5.23 5.46 5.5 7.18 5.16 5.83 5.2 6.85 5.48 7.09 5.34 6.4 5.62 7.5 4.81 7.33 4.65 7.07 4.93 6.14 4.59 6.91 4.86 7.21 4.9 5.77 4.9 7.0 4.56 7.36 4.83 6.93 ]makedots 0.7 0.3 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 6.15 6.63 5.87 7.2 6.15 5.63 5.81 5.65 6.09 5.32 6.12 5.13 6.4 7.02 6.06 6.39 6.26 7.28 5.92 6.94 6.2 6.79 6.23 5.51 6.51 7.41 6.17 6.43 5.36 7.43 5.51 7.44 5.82 6.75 5.5 6.91 5.54 6.08 5.82 5.82 5.48 3.44 5.75 5.04 5.51 6.75 5.79 4.91 5.41 6.78 5.45 6.19 5.73 5.79 5.93 7.45 5.59 5.32 5.87 6.59 5.63 6.95 5.9 5.34 5.56 6.13 5.84 5.86 5.14 6.82 ]makedots 0.0 0.6 0.4 setrgbcolor [ 7.04 7.5 7.15 7.2 7.09 7.43 6.46 7.26 6.12 6.97 6.4 4.49 6.67 7.28 6.43 6.23 6.71 6.08 6.33 6.83 6.37 4.92 6.65 6.23 6.37 6.64 6.3 7.44 6.23 7.41 6.51 5.31 6.55 5.76 6.82 5.74 6.45 7.15 6.48 3.87 6.76 5.59 6.8 6.77 6.48 6.19 6.42 6.79 6.45 6.5 6.73 6.95 5.79 7.0 6.07 6.14 5.73 7.34 6.04 6.11 5.9 7.47 6.18 6.79 6.21 7.19 6.15 5.33 6.15 7.25 6.09 7.43 6.12 7.21 ]makedots 0.9 0.1 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 7.29 7.27 7.26 7.18 7.4 6.53 7.4 6.23 7.06 6.33 7.34 6.24 7.1 7.48 7.37 4.5 7.65 6.77 7.31 6.19 7.49 6.95 6.68 7.19 6.96 7.05 6.62 5.82 6.89 6.95 6.93 6.63 6.8 6.9 7.07 6.24 6.79 6.03 7.07 6.0 6.73 3.87 7.01 5.57 6.77 5.63 7.04 3.61 7.32 7.46 6.67 7.25 6.7 5.31 6.98 5.09 7.02 7.24 6.84 7.45 7.16 6.44 6.82 7.17 7.09 7.13 6.4 6.67 6.37 7.3 ]makedots 0.4 0.5 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 8.3 6.97 7.54 6.99 7.71 7.12 7.37 6.89 7.65 4.65 7.69 4.84 7.96 4.92 7.59 7.18 7.62 3.54 7.9 5.44 7.94 6.42 7.62 6.36 7.56 7.43 7.59 6.95 7.87 7.45 7.76 7.33 7.8 6.47 8.08 6.65 7.74 5.22 8.01 6.78 8.05 6.63 7.71 7.03 7.04 6.54 7.32 5.84 7.35 6.05 7.63 7.38 6.98 7.16 7.02 6.9 7.29 4.53 7.57 7.39 7.29 7.02 7.26 7.27 7.47 7.44 7.41 5.97 7.37 7.37 ]makedots 0.0 0.5 0.8 setrgbcolor [ 8.55 6.85 8.54 6.92 8.2 7.43 8.48 7.42 8.51 5.78 8.66 7.29 8.63 5.12 8.9 7.37 8.56 6.9 7.94 6.75 8.21 6.14 7.93 6.24 8.21 6.29 7.87 4.98 8.15 6.45 7.91 6.19 8.18 4.55 7.84 6.49 8.12 6.39 8.05 7.12 8.33 6.67 8.3 7.32 8.05 6.91 8.32 7.08 8.36 7.49 7.98 5.47 8.26 6.96 8.02 5.46 8.3 3.73 7.96 5.48 8.23 5.51 8.27 6.33 7.54 6.99 7.65 7.38 7.69 7.42 7.96 7.49 7.62 7.08 ]makedots 1.0 0.1 0.5 setrgbcolor [ 9.55 7.28 8.79 6.18 8.83 6.08 9.1 6.22 8.76 5.77 9.04 7.15 8.9 5.93 8.94 4.5 9.22 4.86 8.6 7.37 8.88 3.59 9.15 5.69 8.91 6.5 9.19 5.24 8.85 7.26 9.13 7.36 8.87 6.98 8.85 6.6 9.12 7.3 8.99 7.17 9.3 7.34 8.18 7.28 8.46 6.72 8.5 6.68 8.43 5.98 8.29 6.98 8.57 6.52 8.61 5.32 8.89 6.97 8.27 6.34 8.55 3.98 8.82 7.23 8.58 6.78 8.86 6.94 8.52 7.17 8.54 7.26 8.52 6.56 8.66 7.4 ]makedots 0.2 0.6 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 9.8 6.75 9.8 7.41 9.77 5.22 10.05 7.5 9.71 7.47 9.88 6.62 9.32 7.17 9.53 7.16 9.19 6.04 9.47 5.59 9.5 6.83 9.44 6.68 9.19 6.2 9.46 6.45 9.5 6.67 9.12 5.26 9.4 6.86 9.16 4.95 9.44 3.11 9.71 7.46 9.1 5.65 9.37 5.75 9.41 6.32 9.27 6.32 9.55 5.18 9.21 6.6 9.49 6.82 9.52 6.3 8.79 6.84 8.83 6.66 9.1 6.81 8.76 6.83 ]makedots 0.3 0.3 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 10.04 6.29 10.08 4.67 10.36 5.1 10.02 4.64 10.29 6.46 10.05 6.92 10.33 5.84 10.19 5.38 10.47 5.91 10.51 7.32 10.13 5.0 10.41 6.84 10.17 6.14 10.44 5.06 10.1 7.19 10.38 7.45 10.1 7.11 9.44 6.85 9.71 6.44 9.75 4.93 10.03 6.74 9.41 6.52 9.69 4.36 9.96 7.5 9.72 6.79 10.0 7.02 9.66 7.4 9.86 5.66 10.14 7.41 9.52 6.69 9.8 4.79 9.83 6.04 10.11 6.42 9.77 6.74 9.77 6.73 ]makedots 1.0 0.2 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 10.91 7.16 11.05 7.48 11.09 7.36 11.02 5.75 10.99 7.38 10.67 7.33 10.33 6.74 10.61 6.39 10.64 7.3 10.33 7.2 10.6 7.48 10.64 7.47 10.26 6.95 10.3 6.49 10.58 5.31 10.78 7.3 10.44 6.28 10.72 6.05 10.76 5.96 10.69 6.07 10.44 7.06 10.72 7.46 10.75 6.48 10.38 6.52 10.41 4.77 10.69 3.24 10.73 6.4 11.0 7.45 10.35 5.79 10.63 6.1 10.66 5.26 10.8 7.17 10.78 7.14 10.08 6.13 10.36 6.5 10.02 6.58 10.33 7.42 ]makedots 0.0 0.6 0.3 setrgbcolor [ 11.22 6.79 11.5 7.15 11.16 7.28 11.3 7.27 11.33 4.31 11.61 5.03 11.65 6.41 11.27 4.66 11.55 6.65 11.31 5.62 11.58 4.51 11.24 7.26 11.24 7.46 11.45 7.04 11.38 6.98 11.42 6.71 11.7 5.95 10.89 6.57 10.83 6.71 10.69 7.26 10.97 7.05 10.73 7.28 11.0 4.02 11.28 6.31 10.66 5.93 10.94 3.77 11.22 7.33 10.98 4.98 11.25 5.52 10.91 6.4 10.91 6.71 11.11 6.91 11.05 6.47 11.09 6.23 11.37 6.8 11.03 7.15 ]makedots 0.7 0.1 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 12.23 7.39 12.16 6.71 12.28 7.1 11.92 6.63 11.58 6.05 11.86 5.86 11.9 5.52 12.17 7.41 11.83 6.25 11.58 7.16 11.89 6.42 11.52 7.14 11.55 5.33 11.83 4.13 11.87 6.67 11.49 6.8 11.77 7.12 11.8 6.21 11.7 7.37 11.97 7.33 12.01 6.03 11.95 6.4 12.01 7.16 11.67 5.73 11.94 4.82 11.98 6.09 12.26 7.36 11.6 6.84 11.88 7.28 11.64 7.4 11.92 5.21 11.25 7.01 11.22 6.15 11.5 6.58 11.16 7.12 11.33 6.54 11.61 7.07 11.27 7.2 11.58 7.05 ]makedots 0.5 0.4 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 12.47 5.57 12.75 6.2 12.79 7.17 12.41 6.42 12.45 6.95 12.72 6.15 12.59 5.22 12.86 6.04 12.9 5.99 12.52 5.79 12.56 5.2 12.84 4.29 12.5 7.17 12.14 4.79 12.42 6.88 11.8 6.96 12.08 5.31 12.12 6.0 12.39 6.51 11.98 7.36 12.26 4.46 12.53 6.78 12.29 7.33 12.57 6.79 11.92 6.3 12.19 4.6 12.23 3.93 12.51 4.85 12.17 5.9 12.16 6.86 12.34 7.28 ]makedots 0.0 0.6 0.6 setrgbcolor [ 13.48 6.98 13.42 7.11 13.0 7.4 13.04 6.94 12.97 6.79 13.18 6.79 12.84 6.28 13.11 6.29 12.87 7.27 13.15 4.42 13.43 6.8 13.15 6.22 12.81 5.16 13.08 4.22 13.12 5.37 13.4 6.84 13.26 6.99 12.92 7.39 13.2 6.9 13.23 6.71 12.5 6.86 12.82 6.67 12.47 5.58 12.75 6.26 12.79 7.14 ]makedots 1.0 0.0 0.7 setrgbcolor [ 13.73 5.27 14.01 6.14 14.04 5.86 13.67 6.41 13.7 5.65 13.98 4.9 13.84 6.91 14.15 6.51 13.81 5.86 14.09 5.3 14.13 7.43 13.28 7.23 13.12 6.95 13.4 3.86 13.67 6.45 13.43 6.76 13.71 6.24 13.06 6.41 13.33 4.82 13.37 3.84 13.65 4.86 13.51 5.96 13.54 7.26 13.82 6.91 13.17 7.47 13.45 6.31 13.48 4.22 13.76 5.33 13.06 7.49 13.04 7.19 13.15 7.44 ]makedots 0.3 0.5 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 14.73 7.37 14.32 6.89 13.98 6.88 14.25 6.93 14.29 5.03 14.57 7.26 14.23 6.65 14.29 6.97 13.95 6.55 14.22 5.9 14.26 6.56 14.2 6.9 14.09 7.35 14.13 7.16 14.4 4.51 14.68 7.03 14.06 7.1 14.34 5.93 14.38 6.55 14.65 7.37 14.4 6.93 14.06 6.05 14.34 5.5 14.37 5.0 14.65 6.75 14.03 7.05 14.31 5.06 13.65 7.02 13.96 6.69 13.62 6.48 13.89 7.12 13.79 7.39 14.07 6.36 13.73 6.99 14.01 7.09 13.73 6.03 14.01 6.84 14.04 6.5 13.67 7.45 13.7 6.72 13.98 6.15 ]makedots 0.2 0.4 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 14.87 7.12 15.18 7.42 15.12 7.21 14.98 6.03 15.26 6.97 15.02 7.07 15.29 5.4 14.92 7.25 14.95 5.24 15.23 4.68 15.27 6.81 15.07 7.28 15.34 7.03 14.54 5.67 14.85 7.36 14.47 6.9 14.51 6.04 14.79 6.79 14.65 7.5 14.37 7.04 14.65 4.32 14.93 6.9 14.69 5.74 14.96 5.37 14.31 6.73 14.59 5.47 14.35 7.36 14.62 2.32 14.9 4.09 14.94 6.47 14.56 5.92 14.6 7.38 14.87 6.93 14.74 5.65 15.01 6.7 14.32 7.41 14.29 6.11 ]makedots 1.0 0.1 0.2 setrgbcolor [ 15.88 7.35 15.43 7.31 15.57 7.05 15.61 7.05 15.23 7.08 15.51 7.28 15.27 6.68 15.54 3.8 15.82 6.64 15.86 7.41 15.2 7.14 15.48 6.02 15.52 6.44 15.79 7.31 15.54 6.79 15.2 6.4 15.48 5.95 15.51 5.24 15.79 6.98 15.45 5.93 15.66 5.73 15.59 7.11 15.63 6.5 15.91 7.49 15.59 7.37 15.63 5.74 15.9 7.48 15.56 6.04 14.9 6.86 14.94 6.5 15.21 5.37 14.87 6.61 15.15 6.76 15.19 7.19 14.87 5.94 15.15 6.81 15.18 6.26 14.84 6.97 15.12 6.48 15.33 6.93 15.3 7.3 14.98 7.29 15.3 6.74 14.96 6.99 15.23 6.64 ]makedots 0.0 0.7 0.1 setrgbcolor [ 16.12 6.88 16.44 6.17 16.1 6.55 16.37 6.17 16.27 7.35 16.55 5.97 16.21 5.87 16.49 5.61 16.52 6.31 15.51 7.37 15.79 4.91 16.07 7.32 15.83 5.97 16.1 5.68 15.73 6.51 15.76 3.92 16.04 5.22 16.08 7.06 15.9 5.84 15.94 5.68 16.22 5.53 15.84 6.94 15.6 7.34 15.88 2.78 16.15 4.63 15.91 7.06 16.19 5.52 15.46 7.4 15.43 6.46 15.54 5.9 ]makedots 0.5 0.2 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 16.69 5.54 16.66 7.21 16.86 6.88 16.52 6.55 16.8 3.9 17.08 6.86 16.83 6.56 17.11 6.48 16.46 7.23 16.73 6.32 16.77 5.41 17.05 6.6 16.79 7.44 16.45 7.12 16.73 6.89 16.77 4.86 17.05 6.87 16.43 7.42 16.7 5.86 16.74 7.37 16.88 7.29 16.88 7.24 16.08 7.23 16.35 6.28 16.19 5.98 16.47 4.97 16.5 7.3 16.13 6.35 16.4 6.67 16.44 5.88 16.12 6.35 16.4 7.33 16.16 7.07 16.44 5.53 16.1 6.36 16.37 6.03 ]makedots 0.6 0.4 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 17.38 7.47 17.41 7.11 17.69 5.74 17.35 6.19 17.63 5.98 17.66 6.46 17.8 7.33 17.46 7.28 17.74 7.23 17.78 6.69 16.93 7.18 16.9 6.89 17.11 7.45 17.05 7.22 17.36 7.11 16.77 7.45 17.04 5.26 17.08 4.82 17.36 4.71 16.98 6.99 16.74 7.17 17.02 2.45 17.29 4.49 17.05 6.74 17.33 5.17 17.19 6.57 17.47 6.63 17.13 4.65 17.41 6.13 17.17 6.9 17.44 5.55 16.71 7.31 16.75 7.05 16.69 5.24 16.8 6.64 ]makedots 0.0 0.6 0.5 setrgbcolor [ 18.0 6.69 17.66 6.85 17.94 4.45 18.22 7.21 17.97 6.71 18.25 6.68 17.88 7.17 17.91 6.21 18.19 7.3 17.91 6.03 17.85 7.36 17.77 7.27 18.05 5.25 18.09 6.27 18.36 6.39 17.99 7.41 18.02 5.35 18.3 6.72 18.02 5.6 17.96 6.7 17.99 7.0 17.67 7.31 17.33 5.84 17.61 4.86 17.64 7.04 17.27 6.77 17.54 7.1 17.58 6.18 17.26 7.03 17.58 6.15 17.24 7.37 17.51 7.12 17.44 6.4 17.72 5.68 17.76 6.69 17.38 6.95 17.66 7.4 17.42 7.44 17.69 5.39 17.41 7.11 17.69 5.81 17.35 6.64 17.63 6.51 17.66 6.86 ]makedots 1.0 0.0 0.9 setrgbcolor [ 18.83 7.22 18.67 7.39 18.94 6.27 18.6 6.72 18.88 6.71 18.92 5.92 18.19 6.58 18.22 6.02 18.5 5.98 18.16 5.12 18.44 6.39 18.47 6.71 18.34 7.18 18.61 6.59 18.3 6.56 18.33 4.74 18.61 4.89 18.65 7.25 17.99 7.15 18.27 2.87 18.55 4.97 18.31 5.61 18.58 3.93 18.38 6.85 18.7 6.52 17.83 6.49 18.0 6.65 17.66 7.16 17.94 5.0 17.98 7.0 18.25 7.03 ]makedots 0.4 0.5 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 19.08 6.8 19.26 6.53 18.92 6.73 19.19 4.53 19.47 7.41 19.23 5.46 19.51 5.64 19.13 7.4 19.17 5.12 19.44 6.58 19.16 5.7 19.1 7.29 19.14 7.4 19.31 7.17 19.34 6.87 19.62 7.15 19.28 6.27 19.28 7.12 19.25 7.42 18.47 7.38 18.75 6.66 18.92 6.82 18.58 5.26 18.86 4.41 18.9 5.43 19.17 6.93 18.52 6.49 18.8 7.0 18.56 6.84 18.83 4.59 19.11 7.39 18.52 7.37 18.55 6.74 18.83 5.41 18.49 6.79 18.77 6.71 18.8 6.88 18.97 7.17 19.01 6.92 18.95 5.92 18.94 6.96 18.92 6.97 ]makedots 0.0 0.5 1.0 setrgbcolor [ 20.08 6.85 20.06 6.88 20.17 6.32 19.5 7.21 19.48 7.02 19.76 6.44 19.44 6.84 19.48 4.88 19.75 5.08 19.79 7.2 19.41 4.09 19.69 5.8 19.45 6.13 19.73 4.7 19.59 7.32 19.87 6.91 19.59 5.78 19.87 6.1 19.9 7.06 19.52 4.68 19.8 6.37 19.56 5.41 19.84 3.96 19.14 6.31 18.8 7.32 19.08 5.28 19.12 7.02 19.39 7.1 19.26 7.1 19.19 5.83 19.23 6.48 19.51 6.71 ]makedots 1.0 0.1 0.4 setrgbcolor [ 20.4 7.09 20.33 5.94 20.37 6.49 20.65 6.68 20.31 6.77 20.3 7.44 20.51 7.22 20.17 7.42 20.45 5.71 20.48 5.11 20.76 5.53 20.42 5.04 20.7 6.68 20.73 7.05 20.42 6.33 20.39 7.02 20.07 6.95 19.72 6.03 20.0 5.34 20.04 6.0 20.32 7.42 19.97 5.91 19.97 6.82 20.18 7.16 19.84 5.73 20.11 5.19 20.15 4.59 20.43 6.48 19.77 7.07 19.81 6.23 20.09 3.94 20.36 7.16 20.12 7.31 19.81 6.78 20.09 5.68 19.74 7.03 20.02 7.11 20.06 6.11 20.2 7.24 ]makedots 0.1 0.7 0.0 setrgbcolor [ 21.34 7.29 21.31 6.37 21.42 7.49 20.62 6.84 20.89 7.02 20.55 6.85 20.87 7.1 20.76 7.45 21.07 6.9 20.73 6.31 21.01 5.86 20.73 4.81 21.01 5.23 21.04 6.13 20.67 4.33 20.94 6.15 20.7 4.87 20.98 3.28 20.64 6.17 20.92 6.31 20.84 7.47 20.78 6.85 20.81 6.2 21.09 5.23 20.75 6.95 21.03 7.2 21.06 7.42 20.22 7.24 20.4 7.0 20.4 5.86 20.67 7.43 20.06 6.97 20.33 5.02 20.37 5.56 20.65 5.86 20.31 6.35 20.45 7.37 20.48 6.83 20.76 7.21 20.42 7.18 ] makedots } store % Total count = 1282. /makedots {/curmat exch store 0 2 curmat length 2 sub {/cposn exch store curmat cposn get curmat cposn 1 add get mt dot } for } store % 100 100 10 setgrid % only when not standalone 1.15 dup scale 0.92 setgray 1 setlinewidth 0 setlinecap 0.5 0 mt 7 u 19.5 0 mt 7 u 2 setlinewidth 10 0 mt 7 u 20 7 showgrid black line1 10 -0.3 mt 7.8 u gsave 0 0 mt 7.5 pu 20 pr 7.5 pd closepath clip sdatproc grestore % get off clip /cstretch 0 store /sstretch 0.015 store /font1 /StoneSans-Bold 0.75 gonzofont font1 black 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http://www.tinaja.com|/tinaja |/surl don@tinaja.com|/maildon copyright c2006 rev 2/10 as |/surl |6GuruGram|1|/gurgrm01 |/tinton1 |6#68. (928) 428-4073 |/aqua |/black |a|0W|b|1hat are the fundamental underlying "secret" forces that are driving recent technological developments? How can you apply these fundamental factors to your own product designs? Or at the very least, allow you to become enough aware that you can avoid getting done in by them? |h Here's my choices of the biggies. Some are subtle and some obvious\274 |h |c Factor #1 \320 Decoupling |d Many of the stunning hardware developments of the past few decades can be directly traced to |/to decoupling|/tx , or simply |/to separating inputs from outputs|/tx . |h Really wonderful things happened to electric typewriters when the keyboard output was |/to disconnected|/tx from the printer input. For you could now |/to store and |/to intercept|/tx keystrokes and do all sorts of wonderful things with them. Not the least of which were fixing errors, sharing information, keeping copies, and saving previous work. |h On copiers, decoupling the scanning function from the imaging function has eliminated the outrageous weight and sizes and unreliability of huge precision optics. Especially if size changing zoom or other features were needed. But copiers themselves have largely been obsoleted by stand alone scanners and printers. The ultimate in decoupling is thus to break the problem down into |/to two|/tx separate systems. And allow extensive manipulation and modification between the two. |h On monitors, expensive and unreliable front panel controls are now replaced by a |/to decoupled rotary wheel|/tx . Same for washing machines and other appliances. On prepress, you no longer needed separate paths for text and graphics. Because the decoupled and captured intermediates were simply data files. |h On oscilloscopes and test equipment, going to |/to menu driven buttons|/tx eliminated the need for costly and bandwidth limiting switching in tight front panel spaces. Decoupling by |/to going digital|/tx replaced expensive CRT's with cheap monitors. |h Just about everything electronic benefited from the decoupling of power supplies |/to no longer doing their conversion at 60 Hertz|/tx . By going to DC first and then to a ) cl startnewpage (much higher frequency, switch mode power supplies dramatically slashed the size and weight of most capacitors, inductors, and transformers. And got much cheaper, much cleaner, and more efficient as well. |h Music, of course, used to have these silly acoustical physics rules that everybody had to comply with that determined the size, volume, tonality, and the skill complexity needed. Usually combined with ludicrous ergonometrics. But by newly |/to decoupling the tone generation from any physical embodiment|/tx , electronic music (|jand synthesizers in particular|j) removed most all of the physical barriers. |h Stunning improvements have happened in decoupling content from the physical media forms that it used to demand. Obvious examples are email over actual letters, music and video downloads, and replacement of trade journals and manufacturer's reps with instant online sales. More on |/to disembodiment|/tx shortly. |h |/su Google|1|/google , of course, has totally decoupled information gathering from the traditional librarian gatekeepers and the now ludicrous demand that the information provider, the recipient, and the information itself all had to be in the same place during totally restricted times. |h In telephony, we have decoupled the ability to talk remotely from the need for one fixed monopoly to provide wire-only service to your home or business. Obvious alternatives are cellphones, VOIP, cable, wireless, satellite, and great heaping bunches more yet to evolve. |h The lowly computer mouse has long decoupled itself from the reliability problems of direct mechanical rollers and cords. Through optic sensing and wireless comm. |h The next generation of vehicles will almost certainly be |/to drive by wire|/tx . And again decoupling the driver inputs from what those inputs are supposed to accomplish. |h |c \274with this impact\274 |d One of the more profound consequences of decoupling is that |/to many institutions |/to and infrastructures are now not only utterly useless|/tx , but are clearly a drag on society. Music producers and record companies are rather obvious examples of entities that clearly no longer serve any useful purpose whatsoever. |h Or, what exactly is it that the first class mail part of the post office does, and why is it still of |/to any|/tx use or need whatsoever? Or is this like the British Sailing Ship naval bureaucracy whose size and costs peaked |/to many decades|/tx after the last sailing ship was removed from active service? |h Similar examples obviously involve book publishers from whom the majority of their services are no longer either needed or relevant. Same goes for magazines and, especially, trade journal publishers. |h Nobody felt sorry when the litho camera folks or the printed circuit tape and dots people went out of business. ) cl startnewpage (Dozens of other examples come to mind. Which additional decoupling examples can you think of? What still can be separated? |h |c Factor #2 \320 Accurate Replication |d With accurate replication, the end user gains the ability to make copies of items or IP that are |/to as good or better|/tx than those from traditional sources. |h People once went to a commercial printer because they could not produce their own copies that were as good or as cheap by themselves. Authors once used book publishers because typesetting and artwork creation were unbearably difficult, time consuming, and second rate using previously available tools. |h Musicians once used music companies because today's cheap but superb quality mixing and editing was once impossibly expensive. And that distribution required a physical media presence. |h "Perfect" copies of video or music by either the creator or the end user are now trivial and clearly eliminate the surface noise, hiss, distortion, flutter, wow, and most bandwidth limitations of previous music delivery systems. Generation loss is now completely gone. |/to Digital now trumps Analog.|/tx Nearly always. |h One obvious consequence of cheap and fast perfect copies is that |/to anyone who is |/to overcharging for their product will cause new copies to be made instead by the |/to end user|/tx . Thus, the price gougers all loudly scream "piracy". Rather than realizing that |/to additional copies would likely not be paid for anyway|/tx and probably would |/to increase|/tx the product awareness and demand. |h Traditional copyright and IP protection has thus largely become totally useless. |h |c Factor #3 \320 Elimination of the gatekeepers |d Also known as |/to disintermediation|/tx . |h A |/to gatekeeper|/tx was a profit stealing and time wasting obstructionist between you and something you needed or wanted. The internet has not only eliminated gatekeepers, but also the gate itself and the fence the gate was at one time supposed to go into. |h Obvious examples are used car dealers, manufacturer's representatives, book publishers, music companies, scholarly journal houses, and, (|jsadly|j) librarians. |h Anyone reasonably swift can now use the online |/su Blue Book|1|/kellybook to find exact vehicle values. And can buy or sell the cars themselves via |/su Craig's List|1|/craigslist , |/su eBay|1|/ebay , or any of a number of online |/su Auto Trader|1|/autotrader publications. To the point of which it is clearly fundamentally insane to buy off a used car lot. |h I consider manufacturer's representatives to have been the vilest of the vile. Several evolutionary steps below, say, lawyers. These epsilon minuses made it ) cl startnewpage (virtually impossible to find out how much something actually cost. Or to get hassle free technical info in a timely manner. Replaced, of course, by |/to 24/7 online |/to stores|/tx and totally free instant technical information. |h At one time book publishers offered extensive services not available elsewhere. Such as art departments, type setting, competent editing, or economics of scale. With the possible exception of promotion and marketing, there is nothing a modern book publisher does that you cannot do faster, cheaper, and better by yourself. Or by cash-and-carry |/su targeted web alternatives|1|/lulu . |h And |/su their competitors|1|/bookmarket . |h Similarly, the only purpose I can see for record companies is to steal royalties off their talent. They accomplish absolutely nothing useful otherwise and clearly no longer serve any worthwhile societal purpose. Anybody that wants to can now pick up their own superb quality recording studio for pocket change. |h Publishers of scientific journals are a good example of |/to gatekeepers in the process |/to of self destruction|/tx . An individual today has the choice of paying a journal many hundreds of dollars to publish their paper after a long delay and then making the issues so expensive that their own school library cannot afford a copy. Or of instantly and freely web publishing to a worldwide audience. To survive, the journal publishers must realize that |/to copies of every paper more than three years |/to out of date should be available free and without ANY restrictions|/tx . |h Librarians were classic gatekeepers. Many of whom were control freaks. But the notions that the gatekeeper, the infoseeker, and the infosource had to be in the same place at the same time, or that the info somehow had to be "returned", or that access was restricted to anything less than 24/7 are clearly ludicrous today. As to online access, |/su Burger King|1|/burgerking (|jand similar WiFi locations|j) offer |/to better|/tx service and |/to more info access convenience|/tx than do most libraries. |h With far fewer food and drink restrictions. |h |c Factor #4 \320 Computing power insanely beyond awesome |d Back in the olden days, adding one vacuum tube to a system involved a major upheaval in size, cost, and power consumption. But these days, adding another half million transistors to say, an electric can opener, is no big deal at all. Chances are they are already sitting underused in the microprocessor of choice. |h Engineering and other math analysis at one time had to be super efficient because of the value of the user's time. But |/to throwing another ten million calculations at |/to something is now often trivial|/tx . |h Thus, many |/to brute force solution|/tx methods now become eminently practical. And newly driven by the utterly unbelieveable and unprecedented drop in the cost of memory and the availability of raw computing power. |h ) cl startnewpage (Two examples of brute force math techniques that have only recently become feasible include our |/su Magic Sinewaves|1|/msinexec.pdf and our |/su Fun With Fields|1|/rebound1.pdf tutorials. |h |c Factor #5 \320 Nonlinearizing the tyranny of time |d "The moving finger writes, and having writ, moves on." ain't necessarily so any more. At one time, type was painstakingly set one line at a time. Typewriters worked with one character at a time. Movies were real time edited by cutting and splicing with scissors and glue above the cutting room floor. Video similarly was A-B roll edited only in real time. |h In book publishing, it was an absolute no-no for an author to try and tell the publisher how the text and words were to be arranged. And woe be to the author who dared try to \320 gasp \320 |/to change even one word|/tx after typesetting. For it was outrageously expensive and time consuming to do so. |h These days, of course, we routinely |/to typeset first and edit last|/tx . With zero cost penalties and great heaping bunches of benefits. Because we can now easily do |/to nonlinear editing|/tx . |h The original breakthrough in this ability happened when word processors became |/to screen oriented|/tx rather than line oriented. You could now edit and change anything you could see. Such techniques as cut-and-paste and spell checking and advance outlining became routine. |h And a whole new level of capabilities got added when the layout programs became |/to document oriented|/tx rather than screen oriented. |h Missed a paragraph? No problem. Just let it ripple on through the whole story. Regardless of how many pages are impacted. Reposition a figure so its text is relevant? No biggie. Trivial, even. |h The similar breakthrough in video and movies came about with the |/su Video Toaster|1|/newtek and related software. That let you store your entire movie or show in an |/to instantly |/to accessible|/tx form. You could now easily combine old and new material in any order regardless of its time sequence. And, of course, CGI and sound synchronization manipulated it in previously undreamt of ways. |h Thus shattering the tyranny of time. |h |c Factor #6 \320 Teeny Nano New Nu |d Things are getting smaller. |h Many electronic components are now so small you can't even see them and don't dare sneeze. Which is bad for individual experimenters and students, but otherwise has greatly reduced the size, weight, and cost of new electronics. |h While dramatically expanding their capabilities. ) cl startnewpage (One early example was the |/su Newtek Calibar|1|/muse120.pdf . This pen sized device completely replaced an entire television studio full of test gear. While providing cleaner and better waveforms to boot. |h But you have to draw a distinction between "small" and "really small." The latter also being called |/su nanotechnology|1|/memsnet . Great heaping bunches of very interesting things happen when sizes approach the molecular level. |h Relative surface area goes up as volume goes down. And all the rules of friction, stiction, and attraction/repulsion dramatically change. For instance, the horsepower per pound of a nanoturbine is ridiculously higher than that of its full size brethren. |h By going to nano pore sizes in |/su Super capacitors|1|/supercap , their |/su energy density |1|/energfun can be significantly increased. A new technology called |/su Quantum Dots|1|/quantumdots promises to lead to pv solar panels that may someday become true |/su net energy sources|1|/energfun that are both renewable and sustainable. |h Many unusual chemical and electronic and medical properties emerge with strange shapes at the nano level. Most notable of which are |/to Buckyballs|/tx and the |/to hexagonal carbon tubes|/tx . |h And |/to quantum computing|/tx itself on the nanoscale promises to do complex things in interesting ways. Chemists and biochemists in particular are excited about building entire instruments at integrated circuit scale. For chromatography, DNA analysis, and even direct neural interconnects. |h |c Factor #7 \320 Instant gratification via time compression |d The industrial trade journals that are in the process of self-destructing give us a classic example here. The "standard" way of selling an industrial product used to be to take out a $15,000 ad in a trade journal, wait a few weeks for it to be published, wait a few more weeks for a bingo card recipient lead list, wait a few more weeks to mail our printed literature or alert your reps, and then wait a few more weeks for an order or two to dribble in. |h These days, any more aware industrial supplier has an online 24/7 store. One that, of course, |/to welcomes single and small quantity orders|/tx . From anybody, anyplace, anytime. And |/to makes all of their pricing conspicuously obvious|/tx . |h They also have full product info available, free downloads of any software needed to run their systems, and totally free repair and service manuals. Including continuing full support on older and obsolete products. All created at the tiniest fraction of traditional data books and print service costs. And with zero waste. |h At least this is true of roughly half of the industrial suppliers online today. The rest will either quickly follow suit or will shortly render themselves into noncompetitive nonentities. The outcome is not the least in doubt. |h ) cl startnewpage (Meanwhile, there are new |/to industrial data agglomerators|/tx who gather in industry wide data for your instant and fully objective availability. One major example of which is the |/su Data Sheet Archive|1|/datasheetarchive . |h |/to Topo Maps|/tx are another obvious example. A complete collection of any larger area was outrageously expensive, easily harmed, and hard to maintain. For just a hiking trip, a visit to an outdoors store might have been needed. |h Today, you might go to |/su Topozone|1|/topozone and print out the latest info on exactly the size and scale you need. Without any infuriating borders or page crossings, even. But chances are you'll be attracted to such newer and more flexible services that combine map info with aerial photography and other services. Such as |/su Google|/googlemaps |/su Maps|1|/googlemaps , |/su Google Earth|1|/googleearth , or |/su TerraServer|1|/terraserver . |h |/su email|1|/maildon is perhaps the most dramatic example of 24/7 instant gratification. |h A |/su Google Search|1|/google , of course, is another nearly perfect example. What used to be a frustrating trip to a library and a possible six week wait for a no longer available |/to Interlibrary Loan|/tx (|jthat might or might not happen|j) can now usually be resolved in a very few seconds. Even at 2 AM on a Sunday morning. |h |c Factor #8 \320 Programmability |d With |/to programmability|/tx , a general purpose device is "taught" to meet the needs of a specific user while minimizing or eliminating entirely the need for specialized, low volume, dedicated hardware. |h While laptops and PC's are obvious examples, smaller embedded microprocessors such as the |/su PIC|1|/picup01 overwhelmingly dominate in the number of units sold and their extensive use range. |h One secret of programmability is often to repeatably combine very simple steps of moving, adding, testing, and performing fundamental logic operations. Many individual steps repeated one at a time can go into a programmable |/to algorithm|/tx that gets a larger job done. |h One key concept that makes a programmable computer a computer is its |/to ability |/to to test|/tx . And then, based on the results of that test, |/to alter its future course of |/to action|/tx . A test might view a single bit |/to flag|/tx and do nothing if cleared or branch somewhere else if set. Typical flags are based on a zero result, a negative number, or a set carry. |h Another key concept of many programmable devices is the ability of something external to |/to interrupt|/tx the normal action and temporarily go on to perform a special task. A programmable device that can do many things at once is said to be capable of multitasking. Which often is nothing but the creative use of interrupts. |h Small programmable modules called |/to subroutines|/tx greatly simplify and organize the program code. At the same time, they allow their own reuse at many different ) cl startnewpage (points in the program sequence. A fancier type of subroutine with well defined inputs and outputs might be called an |/to object|/tx . |h My own very favorite programming tool is called |/to table lookup|/tx . In which you simply find a previously known answer instead of going to a lot of trouble to calculate it. My |/su Magic Sinewaves|1|/msintro1 extensively use table lookups. |h Some programmable devices combine their instructions and data into one area, while others keep the two as separate as possible. Leading to differing |/to Harvard|/tx and |/to Princeton|/tx computer architectures. Each with its own proponents and unique capabilities. |h While programming can be done at the individual bit level, fancy tools have evolved using |/to assembly language|/tx and various |/to higher level languages|/tx . Two differing routes toward programmability involve |/to interpreted code|/tx where everything gets done as it comes up in sequence. Or |/to compiled code|/tx that does whole tasks faster on repeated reuse. But is more complex to initially create. |h More examples on programming |/su here|1|/picpro . |h |c Factor #9 \320 Disembodied virtualosity |d It used to be that ideas, instruction, entertainment, and escape were |/to rigidly |/to attached|/tx to their physical distribution media. We had these funny pagey things made out of dead trees we called "books". Songs were molded into plastic disks with groves or pits in them called "records" or "CD's". |h Movies arrived on long pieces of tape called "VHS" or on plastic disks with smaller pits called "DVD's". More timely info or escape were on floppier and even funnier pagey things we called "magazines" Or once (|jonce very long ago and far away|j) "Newspapers". |h And messages, of course, were ink placed on paper and stuffed into envelopes. You then paid the federal government to |/to delay the delivery|/tx of your message for up to a week or two. |h The focus was usually on |/to acquiring the physical media|/tx rather than its actual content. Naturally, when and where possible, manufacturers would obsolete one media format and come out with a new one. Requiring all previously purchased content to be bought anew. Thus eight track no longer reins supreme. |h At the same time, an elaborate "priesthood" developed around physical media creation and distribution. With the result that the original creative sources (authors, composers, scholars, etc\274 ) of the IP intellectual property only received the |/to tiniest fraction|/tx of the final selling price of the physical media being distributed. And even that tiniest fraction was often stolen outright through contractual ripoffs and similar corporate games. |h In each case, |/to the content was physically locked to its distribution medium|/tx . ) cl startnewpage (These days, though, most information is simply disembodied bits floating around in cyberspace. And |/to deliverable at most any speed in most any format|/tx , and freely accessible |/to without|/tx any physical "container" restrictions. |h And, most importantly, |/to readily convertible into any chosen temporary physical |/to format|/tx . Present or future. High or low resolution. |h There is no particular difference between the cyberspace bits used to convey a movie or a song or a math textbook or a power bill or a crawling-on- the-grass gothic novel. And no particular reason to relegate any wanted combination of bits to any specific "hard copy" distribution media or format. |h Established media houses who feel that "business as usual" can in any way, shape, or form continue are awaiting a rude awakening. Especially if they feel that suing their best customers is a viable policy. Or feel that IP sources do not deserve or |/to must receive the lion's share of the final selling price|/tx . |h A related concept are the |/to virtual sets|/tx now common in tv and movie production. In which live actors can be dropped into any imagined environment. And done so from any camera angle or zoom. Going far beyond traditional blue screen or green screen video source switching. |h Such movies as |/su Toy Story|1|/toystory , |/su Robots|1|/robotmovie , or |/su Cars|1|/cars even got shot completely |/to on location|/tx in cyberspace. And bits and pieces of CGI virtual animation show up everywhere. |h Yet another virtual concept involves exactly how and where and by whom things are going to get designed. |h At one time, electronic circuits were first checked out by |/to breadboarding|/tx and mechanical assemblies by actual physical |/to prototyping|/tx . Current practice now uses |/to virtual emulation, simulation, and modeling|/tx instead. |h And a reasonable prediction would be that the next big things along these lines would be the widespread use and the dramatic price reductions of new |/to rapid |/to prototyping systems|/tx or |/su Santa Claus Machines|1|/santa01 . |h |c Factor #10 \320 Devaluation |d In 1968, the price of one bit of core memory was a nickel. Today, the equivalent memory costs as little as a |/to tiny fraction of a microcent|/tx . The price of memory has been dropping by something like |/to a factor of ten each decade|/tx . And shows no sign of abating. |h As memory drops precipitously in value, it becomes |/to the|/tx critical ingredient or |/to the|/tx enabling technology to open the doors towards as yet undreamt of cyberspace and electronic wonderments. |h But at the same time, |/to this devaluation ruthlessly destroys whole industries and |/to entire product groups|/tx . ) cl startnewpage (Obvious examples are slide rules, typewriters, mechanical calculators, copiers, printed circuit tape and dots, litho cameras, local fiber optics, smaller offset printing presses, artwaxers, newspapers, record players, 8-tracks and cassettes, books, slopping-in-the-slush photography, trade journals, VHS video, etc\274 |h In many instances, |/to many of the purveyors of the status quo simply could not |/to cope and have vanished without a trace|/tx . |h Winning products that do succeed are quickly taken offshore where all of their manufacturing costs plummet and cutthroat pricing reigns supreme. Very often, |/to the individual component parts for an electronic project often cost ridiculously |/to more|/tx than a comparable item in Aisle 13 of |/su Walmart|1|/walmart . |h We can shortly expect someone working at home to produce the entertainment equivalent of a blockbuster movie for a total of less than $75 in expenses. |/to Thus |/to leading to a 1,000,000:1 reduction in the costs of moviemaking|/tx . As we've seen, superb home recording studios can be bought for pocket change. |h |/to It is ludicrous to assume that the price of movies and videos and songs are not |/to about to drop preciptously|/tx . And the movie theaters who have steadfastly refused to install digital projection have signed their own death warrant. For low cost and high resolution home theater should soon reign supreme. |h The situation is even bleaker in cyberspace. Where devaluation has made most all intellectual property take a major hit. |/to People expect stuff to be free or nearly so|/tx . And if it is not, it |/to will|/tx either be stolen or else a free substitute found. |h |c Factor #11 \320 Unexpected value added |d Products that replace older ones not only must be better in what the original did, but also must provide for |/to new|/tx and |/to unexpected|/tx features. If they are to be winners. |h Thus, DVD's were better than VHS tapes because they provided cleaner and higher resolution pictures. Plus improved sound. They also were cheaper to manufacture and record. And, being contactless, did not normally degrade with repeated playings. At least with reasonable care. |h But at the same time, they also eliminated any need for rewinding hassles. And provided for random access of episodes and scenes. And often had enough room left over for director's comments, alternate endings, snippets from the cutting room floor, gaffs or gags, and bunches more. |h Less noted but in ways far more significant, |/to a DVD was much cheaper to mail|/tx . Leading to the entire |/su Netflix|1|/netflix phenomena and utterly demolishing local video rental stores. Not to mention staking |/su Blockbuster|1|/blockbuster to an anthill. Or completely eliminating time slot competition. |h A similar case can be made for cell phones. Yes, they were more portable and convenient than land lines. But, my oh my, all of the things they do that were ) cl startnewpage (previously unthunk of with conventional phones. Like telling time to eliminate the need for a wristwatch. Or providing a LED flashlight. Or a stopwatch. Or instant messaging. Or GPS navigation reception. Or music and videos. Or having finally surmounted decades of Picturephone fiascos. Or let you record news events on the spot. Or instant reporting of accidents and fires. |h And the next generation of phones should even be able to report their location if lost or stolen. |h The future products that succeed will not only be much better than what they are replacing, but will offer quantum performance leaps in totally unexpected ways. |h |c Factor #12 \320 Indirect payback. |d It used to be that you could write a magazine article, a short story, or a book and people would pay you fairly well for it. Or could put together assembled or kit electronic devices that would sell for much more than their component costs. Sadly, those days are long gone. |h In terms of real dollars, many authors today receive |/to less than one tenth|/tx the payments they did a few decades back. Despite offering much higher quality in a more timely manner. |h It is one thing to offer a definitive killer website with fairly priced useful products. And another entirely to show a worthwhile positive cash flow. One possible solution involves |/to indirect payback|/tx . |h With indirect payback, |/to you essentially give much of your stuff away for free|/tx . And then make up the difference through such things as |/su banner ads|1|/advt01 , clickthru programs, referrals, |/su cash and carry consulting|1|/info01 , an online 24/7 store, your |/su auction|/ebay |/su sales through eBay|1|/ebay , tech illustration services, associate programs, and similar ploys. |h Any one of which may not be that big a deal, but taken together can easily make your whole venture worthwhile. |h |c Factor #13 \320 Hybridization |d With hybridization, |/to two or more normally separate approaches can be combined |/to into a single solution|/tx . Often leading to very surprising consequences. |h The obvious biggie here is combining an ICE internal combustion engine with onboard electrics and batteries. Since each now needs to provide only half the total peak load, both can be smaller. The battery side never strands you empty, while the ICE side gets to run at an optimal load and optimal speed. |h Curiously, your city mileage now |/to exceeds|/tx your highway mileage. Such new features as regenerative braking and electronic all wheel drive and automatic restart are easily added. And, as batteries improve, the ratio of ICE to electrics can quickly adapt to new economics. |h ) cl startnewpage (The efficiency of many alternate energy systems can sometimes be dramatically improved by |/to capturing|/tx any waste heat and putting it to good use. Examples include |/to cogeneration|/tx , |/to bottom cycling|/tx , |/to process heat recovery|/tx , or even |/to hot water |/to production|/tx . Similarly, we might expect exhaust gas heat energy recovery or reformation systems to eventually improve ICE efficiency. |h Instead of offering only street maps, or only topographic maps, or only aerial photography, the three are now easily combined into one hybrid web service. To which we can eventually expect full stereo viewing, panned horizontal and zoomable views, controllable additional geographic overlays, and selectable multispectral coverage extending both into the ultraviolet and infrared. Stereo and infrared combined should be most useful for discovering new |/su caves|1|/nss . |h An obvious computing example of hybridization is combining a scanner, fax, printer, and copier into a single paper processing peripheral. |h It is now often routine for a DVD movie to offer 16:9 widescreen on one platter side and conventional 4:3 on the other. |h Electronic meters sometimes offer |/to both|/tx digital (for accuracy) and analog (for viewing changes or monitoring) outputs. Similarly, digital oscilloscopes now have new features that fake the best of analog scopes, especially for viewing glitches or rarely repeating data. At the same time, their new capabilities often include the spectrum analysis, power measurement, and data acquisition that once required individual stand-alone instruments. |h Computing systems traditionally gave you a choice of dense and cheap hard disk memory or fast, compact, and low power flash memory. By hybridizing and combining the two, most routine transfers can be done in flash. With the main electromechanical disk only needing powered for brief transfers. |h For the best of both worlds. |h Which is better for product photography, a digital camera or a scanner? The best solutions might use |/to both at once|/tx for surprising depth-of-field results and other stunning benefits. Per |/su this example|1|/ebayphoto . Or the |/su additional tutorials here|1|/auct01 . |h |c Factor #14 \320 Increasing competitiveness |d A recent count showed something like |/to 100 million websites|/tx registered and about half that many currently being live and providing more or less useful content. Like it or not, |/to you've now got competition|/tx . Great heaping bunches of it. And some of which will be better funded with better products, a better presentation, higher energy, tighter cost controls, cheaper suppliers, and more popularity. |h Fortunately, |/su nobody knows you are a dog|1|/nobodydog on the internet. Individuals and small scale startups have definite and major advantages over large scale corporations |/to if|/tx their web presence is good enough and |/to if|/tx their focus is tight enough and |/to if|/tx their reaction time is quick enough. ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (Defenses against competitors might include |/to giving a lot away to sell a little|/tx , |/to maximizing your personal value added|/tx , |/to offering highly unique content|/tx , making |/to daily upgrades and improvements|/tx . Plus |/to continuing lifelong self-study|/tx . While |/su tirelessly promoting your website|1|/advetorl.pdf , carefully |/to monitoring your web logs|/tx , and |/to improving your links and search engine ratings|/tx . |h And, above all, |/to of becoming a "must view" definitive resource|/tx for your area of interest and expertise. |h |c Factor #15 \320 Form |jno |jLonger |jFollows |jFunction |d If you were designing a telephone a few years back, you started with a big and klutzy bell and an equally klutzy hybrid transformer. To which you added a fairly complex mechanical dial assembly. This defined a box too heavy to comfortably lift that had to go onto a table or shelf. A handset had to be separate and its distance from receiver to transmitter set by human heads. |h These days, all of those limitations are gone and |/to a telephone can be any shape |/to or size|/tx and include an astonishingly wide array of additional features as well. |h If you were designing a 35mm camera a few years back, you had to have two vertical cylindrical film cassettes separated by flat film plane. In front of which you placed the bottom of a Coke Bottle or similar fancier chunks of glass. |h These days, all of those limitations are gone and |/to a camera can now be any shape |/to or size|/tx . Even the lens can now be replaced by a small drop of oil. As before, anstonishing wide array of additional features can easily be added. |h If you were designing a light bulb a few decades back, you started with an intense point source and placed a controlled environment bulb around it. Virtually all of today's incandescent light fixtures are based on accomodating this specific form follows function shape. |h LED lighting sources now offer efficiencies that are ridiculously higher than incandescents. But |/to the basic shape of an intense point source is a big no-no|/tx . Because of heat management problems. LED lighting systems are best based on many dispersed emitters rather than a single concentrated point source. |h And thus should shortly and totally revolutionize what a "lamp" is or what it should look like. |h |c Factor #16 \320 Complexity |jBeyond |jComprehension |d Back in the days of an Apple IIe, any reasonably swift individual could understand exactly what all 128,000 bytes of memory were up to at all times. But these days, |/to nobody but nobody has the faintest clue what even a tiny fraction of memory |/to in, say, a Pentium with XP is up to|/tx . |h And that is |/to before|/tx the malware and trojans take over. |h ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (|1Similarly, at one time a reasonably swift individual could build up all aspects of a new product by creating their own printed circuit board and attaching obvious and easily understood components to it. With common tools and ordinary skills. |h Not so any more. Sneeze and all your parts vanish without a trace. |h The points being that |/to much of what was exactly and precisely known in past |/to development now has to be taken on faith|/tx . |h And that no single individual is likely to completely understand any new product development. Teams and groupwork are now apparently a must. |h |c Factor #17 \320 The |jRules |jHave |jAll |jChanged |d What was a level playing field can often turn into a bottomless pit. One where new competitors can clearly be noncompetitive. Thus running away with all the marbles. |/to Because they can completely ignore the way things were|/tx . |h Some examples: |/su Craig's List|1|/craigslist is totally blowing away newspaper classified ads because it is free. It is instantly delivered, exceptionally convenient, and can be trivially searched. |h Music studio time currently goes for around $850 per hour. But you can build your own music studio for around $849 total. And often produce a much better product. Since there will now be zillons of new songs per year, |/to the value of any |/to delivered song to an end user will clearly plummet|/tx . |h The belief that a classic website will continue to increase in popularity and demand can be flawed. Owing to the |/to eyeball siphoning|/tx caused by other newly emerging things for people to do online. Such as personal networking, YouTube videos, online tv downloads, and countless emerging new stuff yet unthunk of. |h Producing |/su books on demand|1|/bod01 makes the |/to fatally flawed assumption that people |/to will still value books|/tx . The online distribution of info content with its near-zero delivery cost, its timeliness, its searchability, its instant access, its ease of updating, its total lack of waste and returns, its infinite forever backlists, and countless other advantages totally trashes this assumption. |h |/to The utter and total demise of the book is imminent|/tx . Because of their inherent and unavoidable flaws. It is just not yet too clear whether this will happen by way of new |/su eBook readers|1|/ebookread or by the use of improving laptops, handhelds and any evolving ipods and such. But happen it will. |h Quantum leaps in product features are routinely occuring. You cannot even give a CRT monitor or tv away, owing to flat panel LCD demand. |/su LED lighting|1|/LEDjournal is coming on like gangbusters, owing to its flexibility and extreme efficiency. |h And new approaches to solar panels involving |/su CIGS|1|/CIGS and |/su Quantum Dots|1|/Quantumdot promise to eventually be capable of delivering net energy. Something that conventional silicon PV will |/su never|1|/energfun be able to do. ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (|1The bottom line is that |/to projecting the value, price, and demand of any current |/to products into the future is fraught with peril|/tx . Because things simply ain't gonna be done that way any more. |h |c Factor #18 \320 Immediacy |d People want things to happen 24/7 aka NOW. |/to Stuff can now easily be bought |/to and sold online at any time of day|/tx . |h Digital cameras are an obvious example. At one time you took your pictures, sent them out for development, and then, possibly weeks later, made your final prints. Now it is click and publish. Not to mention the hidden benefits of full color, easy |/su postproc|1|/postproc.pdf , reuse, and preserved quality. |h The demise of the trade journal is being directly caused by their obsene ad turnaround times. You'd create and submit your ad and it would not appear in print for weeks or months later. More weeks and months for some bingo card results to dribble in. More weeks and months for them to even respond to your mailings and ad followups. And then maybe \320 just maybe \320 a sale or two. |h The new |/su video sites|1|/newvideosites coming online are yet another example. These now deliver thousands of movies and tv episodes whenever you want to start them with full pause, fast forward, and rewind. And are now utterly and completely blowing away on-the-air and cable tv services in the process. Besides block busting Blockbuster. |h The upcoming ebook readers or similar appliances can shortly be expected to do the same thing to print and publishing. A reasonable authors royalty rate is now 90 percent, and publishing turnaround time from submission to publication should be less than fifteen minutes max. Acceptance of your material is, of course, a certainty. |h |/to CGI and similar techniques have revolutionized moviemaking|/tx . We can shortly expect someone working at home to come up with an experience comparable to a major motion picture at a total cost of $67.73 and a total time involvement of three weeks. Thus leading to a one million to one reduction in the cost of watchable entertainment. |h |c Factor #19 \320 The |jEnd |jof |jScarcity |d Many businesses and services were once based on picking up a pile of arcane equipment or expertise and being the sole local source for the product offered. |h |/to Innovative new solutions now give most anybody the ability to knock out a |/to better product|/tx . Faster, simpler, and cheaper. Where competitors were once few and far between, there are now hundreds of thousands or even millions of them. |h Some examples of stuff already shot out of the saddle... ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (|/shiftin |y |6|/to PRINT SHOPS|j\320|/tx At one time, you had to buy a fancy printing press and zillions of support items like litho cameras, artwaxers, platemakers, joggers, punches, binders, green eyeshades, etc. These days, |/to anybody |/to with an inkjet or laser printer can instantly produce whatever they |/to need whenever they need it.|/tx |h |6|/to PHOTO FINISHING|j\320|/tx Here you once had to have an enlarger and a darkroom, along with all of the "slopping in the slush" accessories. Now, you can use |/su Imageview32|1|/imageview32 , PhotoShop, or any of hundreds of free computer programs to do much more image |/su postproc|1|/postproc.pdf much better. And do so ridiculously faster. |h |6|/to TRAVEL AGENCIES|j\320|/tx Specialized contacts and insider info clearly have been replaced by online services newly available to anyone 24/7. |h |6|/to RESEACH SERVICES|j\320|/tx At one time, profitable |/su consulting|1|/info01 could be based on knowning which libraries to use when, agressive subscription to trade journals and industrial shows and such. Because accurate and useful info was scarce. Now |/to just about anybody can do an instant |/su Google Search|1|/google |/to to come up with more and better information.|/tx |h |6|/to FONTS|j\320|/tx Long ago and far away, adding a new font capability to what you were doing was a gut wrenching experience The fonts, of course, were one size and one weight at a time. Today, thousands of fonts are available free, and hundreds of them are included in standard publication software. |h |6|/to CREATIVE WRITING|j\320|/tx Magazines typically had "room" for a small stable of regular authors. At least some of whom quickly established reps as |/su sought out resources|1|/glair01 . The explosive onscene arrival of those |/su blogs|1|/rss now means that |/to there are hundreds of thousands or even |/to many millions of new info and entertainment sources|/tx . Like it or not, some of them are better than you. At the very least, there are now thousands of highly competitive clones. |h |6|/to SPECIALTY STORES|j\320|/tx It used to be that if you needed, say, some candles, that you would go to a brick and mortar specialty store. But today there are great heaping bunche of candles available 24/7 found on |/su eBay|1|/ebay , |/su Craig's List|1|/craigslist , or |/su Kiji|2|/kijii . |/shiftout |1The scarcity of sources is clearly gone. There's bunches of obvious stuff that is about to get unscarce.\274 |h Books about to blown out of the water by eBook readers. Newspapers whose economics are now absurd. Over the air and cable tv laugingly obsoleted by web delivery. Outrageously expensive, slow, and hard to obtain peer reviewed scholarly pubs shot out of the saddle by instant web distribution. |h ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (Trade journals, again due to ludicrous economics. And, of course, music delivered from tens of thousands of sources that are much more cheaply produced that the cost of one hour of traditional studio time. |h The bottom line is that |/to there are no more reject slips|/tx . Nor any valid reason to limit the selection and availability of most any product. |h |c Factor #20 \320 Fewer |jMechanical |jParts |d The breaker points in an automobile were by far the least reliable and highest repair item. By new electronic switching, |/to most service needs were eliminated|/tx . At the same time, timing and dwell became ridiculously more flexible. Besides less obvious benefits, such as spark plugs now lasting forever. |h A piano might have thousands of mechanical parts in it. By switching to electronic synthesis, the number of moving piano parts got dramatically reduced and vastly simplified. And one instrument can now sound like any size or shape piano. Or, for that matter, any other instrument. Real or imaginary. |h Mechanical adding machines were horribly complex and hard to maintain. Not to mention that even such simple math functions as multiplication or division added horribly to the system cost. Solid state calculator chips blew these away completely. |h A VHS tape cassette had dozens of parts in it, and the VCR load/unload mechanism was quite elaborate. A DVD replaced the cassette with one round piece of plastic. And the player mechanics reduced to a moving shelf, a rotating spindle, and a linear positioner. |h The DVD itself is in the process of getting blown out of the water by direct web distribution. With zero moving parts and incredible flexibility. |h Ultra precision rotating disk drives are now being replaced by thumb drives and similar solid state flash memory. With dramatic reliability, speed, and power improvements. |h Turning to stuff not yet here yet, compressor based cooling is an obvious candidate for solid state substitution. With possibly higher efficiencies, less noise, reduced environmental impact, and far less maint. |h Automobiles can use fewer parts by going to electric valves. Similar gains are to be made by changing to electric power steering and electric variable rate cooling. Or even no ICE parts at all by going to fuel cells. |h |c Factors #21 thru #26 \320 \274 and some "also rans"\274 |d There are several "second tier" factors that I felt did not quite make the cut for our above list\274 ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (|/shiftin |h |6|/to Communities without borders \320 |1|/tx Should you chose to do so, you can easily access national and international markets for your products and services. Collaborators on any project need not ever meet each other, let alone be working for the same company or group or organization. While I personally have no international sales or support because I have found them to present far more problems than they solve, whole communities and product groups aggressively seek out worldwide support. Obvious examples are the |/su Linux|1|/linux and |/su Open Source|1|/opensource folks. |h |6|/to WYSIWIG \320 |1|/tx People apparently |/to demand|/tx solutions whose screen views closely approximate the service they are providing. While generally a good idea, the downside is that WYSIWIG ruthlessly destroys many |/to older and better|/tx routes to getting useful results. One sad example is how the infinitely superior |/su text adventures|1|/adamsadventures got completely blown away by their graphic imitators. In other cases, more controllable and more powerful solutions get substituted by a pretty screen. Or will otherwise generate little popular interest. Two examples include my |/su PostScript as a General Purpose Computing Language|1|/distlang and my |/su Gonzo|/gonzoutils |/su Layout Utilities|1|/gonzoutils . |h |6|/to Seamless pan and zoom \320 |1|/tx Most printed topo maps had to end up the same size and shape. Which meant that you sometimes needed four of them for a simple hike that wandered off near some northwest corner. Web replacements such as |/su Topozone|1|/topozone or |/su Google Maps|1|/googlemaps largely ignored the original paper page boundaries and map scales. Letting you move around at will with minimum distractions. The concept of taking and using a small portion of a major data base and |/to allowing that portion |/to to freely move or expand without boundaries|/tx goes far beyond topo maps. And represents a major and profound improvement in exactly how and where data, information, or entertainment can be attractively and usefully presented. |h |6|/to Gross incompetence \320 |1|/tx About a decade ago, many community colleges completely dropped their electronics programs. Some did so because the football team needed the money. High school courses quickly followed suit. |/to Heathkit|/tx went belly up, and ham radio became a ludicrous geriatric parody of its one time greatness. While |/to Popular |/to Electronics|/tx and most other hobby level magazines flat out died. |h |1The electronic kit market vanishing with them. Only |/su Circuit Cellar|1|/circuitcellar and |/su Make|1|/makemag remain today. Meanwhile, electronics itself got so small and so precise and so demanding of costly gear that opportunities for entry level homebrew experimentation became truly challenging. |h The bottom line being that |/to there is now zero interest or motivation |/to whatsoever in the USA today for beginners and students to become |/shiftout ) cl startnewpage /shiftin {xpos /xposhold exch store /xpos xpos 3 add store /txtwide txtwide 5 sub store} def /shiftout {/xpos xposhold store /txtwide txtwide 5 add store} def (|/shiftin |y |/to technically competent.|/tx Or, even worse, |/to few computers today are |/to sold that include ANY programming language, let alone a decent |/to beginner's one|/tx . One side effect of which was a community college student we just hired who did not know what the name of the direction was to the left when facing north. The consequences of which are (A) |/to It is virtually impossible to get competent tech help |/to if you are an individual or a small scale startup|/tx , and (B) Foreign solutions are now nearly certain to eat you alive. |h |6|/to Freebies are the norm \320 |1|/tx The popular expectation today is that all IP intellectual property offered on the web is to be either "free" or extremely low in price. Which means that |/to you have to give a lot away |/to to sell a little|/tx . As we've seen before, the old rules no longer apply. |h |6|/to Poisoned channels \320 |1|/tx While you could buy a bad book at a chosen bookstore, you were unlikely to buy one that would |/to destroy|/tx your entire library. The web is endemic with library destroyers such as viri, spam, malware, trojans, misreprentations, and outright scams. Not to mention lesser nuisances, offensive content, and time wasters. All of which clearly will demand |/to eternal vigilance|/tx . In the form of firewalls, filters, and, above all, plain old common sense. |h |6|/to History demands a web champion \320 |1|/tx If magazine articles, technical papers, journal reprints, or equipment service info is to survive, they |/to MUST|/tx be freely available on the web. |/to Otherwise, history is history|/tx . |h |6|/to Unfinished kaizen \320 |1|/tx A fairly accurate translation of the Japanese term |/su Kai-Zen|1|/kaizen is "continuing small improvements". Such as a version 3.17 upgrade. Done when and where needed in |/to exactly|/tx the size and shape required. Unlike like, say, most magazines that had a repeated and fixed "drop dead" deadlines at which time everything had to be finished, had to be exactly the right size, and had to precisely "fit" its carefully allotted space. One of the great liberating features of the web and the culture it has created is |/to the elimination of the "one size fits |/to all" mentality|/tx . And the need for most fixed or repeating deadlines. |h|/shiftout |c For |jMore |jHelp |d I have a hollow feeling that I may have missed one or two biggies in our above analysis of fundamental factors driving today's tech innovation. If you feel that something needs added, please |/su email me|1|/maildon with your suggestions. |h Custom consulting services are offered |/su here|1|/info01 , while new opportunities in energy efficiency can be found |/su here|1|/magsn01 . Many more product design and development ideas have appeared in our older |/su Blatant Opportunist|1|/blat01 columns that once appeared in |/to Midnight Engineering|/tx magazine. These eventually morphed into this current |/su GuruGram|1|/gurgrm01 series better suited for web presentation and distribution. |h ) cl startnewpage %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % EOF