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Adding $\LaTeX$ to your Jekyll Site
As it turns out, adding support to render LaTeX in a Jekyll blog isn’t all that hard, because other people have done most of the heavy lifting. There are two main ways to do this:
- Client-side rendering: After the page loads, a JS script is run to transform LaTeXy parts of the page to lovely, styled HTML.
- Build-time rendering: After Markdown files are compiled to HTML, a Jekyll plugin further transforms those LaTeXy parts to HTML as well. Here’s how you do either using $\KaTeX$.
Thulium: Disk Failure
On 24 December 2020, my home server Thulium went down. Usually the cause of downtime is my home’s public IP address changing, and I need to update the DDNS record with my domain name provider. This time it wasn’t; when I tried to SSH in through the domain, I reached something, but it wouldn’t let me in. I managed to SSH in through the local IP address and tried to reboot, but I got a segmentation fault, of all things. In the end, I rebooted the server manually by walking over to the other room and holding down the power button. I could then SSH in, my Docker containers were up, all was well.
On 27 December 2020, it happened all over again. This time, I could SSH in again, but everything was painfully slow. I checked htop
: CPU and memory were doing fine. I checked my internet connection: that was fine too. It must be, then, a disk issue (obviously, since that’s the title of this post).
Interesting Problems at Small Values
This post is based on the observation that, in a variety of fields (e.g. logic, computics, mathematics, physics), while certain classes of problems can be parameterized by some natural number $n$, it appears that the interesting problems―not so simple as to be trivial, but not so complex as to be unsolvable, undecidable, intractable, or nonexistent―always occur at small $n$. Below is a collection of such problems, describing at which $n$ they are interesting, and how so.
More …Thulium: A One-Year Retrospective
A few months ago, on the 15th of April, was the one-year anniversary of ert.space and the Thulium server, still running happily in its desktop tower, now with an extra 2 GB of RAM. Even if I didn’t have the Thulium posts to remind me, I would always have the timely bill for the domain name. Over the past year, a multitude of services and Docker containers have risen and fallen, having been replaced or abandoned or, rarely, taken up a more permanent post. In 2018, I began with the following:
More …Ramblings on the Coq Kernel
Back during the summer of 2019, I worked a bit on the Coq kernel. At the same time, I posted a lot of toots on Mastodon about whatever random problems I was encountering. I’ve decided to collect them here, as it might just be that some of these will be useful to me again at some point.
More …Designing ShareVitalSigns for iOS
For usage notes, see the LNhealth wiki page on SVS for iOS. This post is cross-posted to the LNhealth wiki at Designing ShareVitalSigns for iOS.
More …Bridges of Vancouver
For reasons yet fathomable, I’ve decided to cross by foot (almost) all major pedestrian-accessible bridges crossing a body of water in Greater Vancouver. These are, courtesy of this list, as labelled on the following map, and listed as follows, in alphabetical order:
More …