top | item 5017078 How to fold a a Julia fractal (MathBox) 20 points| archgoon | 13 years ago |acko.net | reply 4 comments order hn newest [+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply The author made this using MathBox, which was previously discussed here.http://acko.net/blog/making-mathbox/ [+] [-] jstanley|13 years ago|reply "Typesetting math: 5%" - does this really need to be done on the client side? [+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply Probably not. Though, can you think of any good server side tools that can generate prerendered mathML?I found this coming from https://plus.google.com/117663015413546257905/posts/An6Z8Ce3...John Baez also mentioned the rather high computational demands of the page. There's probably some interesting opportunities for optimization, and automatically figuring out what can be done on the client and the server. [+] [-] rinrae|13 years ago|reply this website froze my Chrome beta three times today, but it was totally worth it. (probably Chrome's fault anyway.)
[+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply The author made this using MathBox, which was previously discussed here.http://acko.net/blog/making-mathbox/
[+] [-] jstanley|13 years ago|reply "Typesetting math: 5%" - does this really need to be done on the client side? [+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply Probably not. Though, can you think of any good server side tools that can generate prerendered mathML?I found this coming from https://plus.google.com/117663015413546257905/posts/An6Z8Ce3...John Baez also mentioned the rather high computational demands of the page. There's probably some interesting opportunities for optimization, and automatically figuring out what can be done on the client and the server.
[+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply Probably not. Though, can you think of any good server side tools that can generate prerendered mathML?I found this coming from https://plus.google.com/117663015413546257905/posts/An6Z8Ce3...John Baez also mentioned the rather high computational demands of the page. There's probably some interesting opportunities for optimization, and automatically figuring out what can be done on the client and the server.
[+] [-] rinrae|13 years ago|reply this website froze my Chrome beta three times today, but it was totally worth it. (probably Chrome's fault anyway.)
[+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply
http://acko.net/blog/making-mathbox/
[+] [-] jstanley|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] archgoon|13 years ago|reply
I found this coming from https://plus.google.com/117663015413546257905/posts/An6Z8Ce3...
John Baez also mentioned the rather high computational demands of the page. There's probably some interesting opportunities for optimization, and automatically figuring out what can be done on the client and the server.
[+] [-] rinrae|13 years ago|reply