diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index dce8922..cb6a416 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -1,4 +1,3 @@ result* .direnv .envrc -main.pdf diff --git a/bibliography.bib b/bibliography.bib index ddf1d42..e69de29 100644 --- a/bibliography.bib +++ b/bibliography.bib @@ -1,10 +0,0 @@ -@article{testy, - title={Citation analysis}, - author={Nicolaisen, Jeppe}, - journal={Annual review of information science and technology}, - volume={41}, - number={1}, - pages={609--641}, - year={2007}, - publisher={Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company Hoboken} -} diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index efce5e3..c21d1bb 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -30,8 +30,7 @@ typixLib = typix.lib.${system}; - #src = typixLib.cleanTypstSource ./.; - src = ./.; + src = typixLib.cleanTypstSource ./.; commonArgs = { typstSource = "main.typ"; diff --git a/main.pdf b/main.pdf index e71b7e8..ccde7a6 100644 Binary files a/main.pdf and b/main.pdf differ diff --git a/main.typ b/main.typ index 05edbfc..595812d 100644 --- a/main.typ +++ b/main.typ @@ -1,5 +1,3 @@ -#import "@preview/wordometer:0.1.4": word-count, total-words - #set page( paper: "a4", numbering: "-1-", @@ -16,7 +14,7 @@ Process Essay\ May 17th, 2025 #align(center, text(size: 17pt, weight: "bold")[ - *Around the world in 133 ms* + *Essay title* ]) #set align(left) @@ -24,45 +22,20 @@ May 17th, 2025 justify: true, leading: 2em, spacing: 2em, - first-line-indent: (amount: 3em, all: true) + first-line-indent: (amount: 5em, all: true) ) -#show: word-count +#lorem(200) -Have you ever wondered what really happens with your voice when you talking to someone on the phone? -From the instant the soundwaves leave your throat until they reach the ear of the person you are talking to, -a series of analog and digital processes collaborate to carry your message. -In fact, this whole process can be broken down into three major steps -- sampling, quantisation and modulation. -In the course of this essay, we will investigate each of these steps in more depth to understand how modern -communication works on a technical level. -//To understand how we communicate across the globe on a technical level, we begin with the most primitive -//instrument of all: the human voice. +#lorem(200) -In the sampling process, an analogue signal is transformed into its digital representation. -This signal can be interpreted as any kind of waveform or motion that has not been processed by -a digital device yet. -For example, the sound of your voice or the tone of a guitar string is a suiting type of signal that we -want to digitize. -However, a digital device like a computer or a phone cannot unterstand such an analogue signal, thus we have -to first convert it into some kind of electrical signal the device can unterstand. -We can achieve that by taking repeated "snapshots" of the current state of the analogue signal and saving -the corresponding value. -The resulting signal is now so called "time discreet", because we went from a continuous signal that has a value -for every imaginable point in time to one where such values only exist at fixed, predefined points in time -(i.e. every second). -Going on, we now have a signal that consists of repeated snapshots of the originating signal where each value -can still be considered as continuous +#lorem(200) -//To see how sampling works, we start with the sounds you make when you speak -- combinations of multiple sound waves at varying frequencies. -/*For our purposes, however, we can simplify this complexity by modeling your voice as a single -continuous sine wave, since this idealization does not affect the sampling process. -Furthermore, we can think of this sine wave as the very first input into our communication pipeline. -With the analogue signal established, we can go on and discuss the way our signal is transformed into a digital -representation. -*/ +#lorem(200) -Essay has a total of #total-words words. +#lorem(200) + +#lorem(200) #pagebreak() - -#bibliography("./bibliography.bib", style: "ieee", title: "References") +#bibliography("bibliography.bib", style: "ieee", title: "References")