256 pennies is one hexadecimal dollar. The payments go into an account at the Bank of San Serriffe. I can no longer write personal checks to the awardees, for reasons discussed here.
Ka-NOOTH.
With recent versions of Mac OS X, everything works automatically, so you won't be asking that question.
On older Mac platforms, use a program like Stuffit; and PostScript files can be viewed with MacGS (GhostScript).
Often your browser will already uncompress them, but it might not be smart enough to change the file name. For example, if you download the file lpg.tex.gz, which is 7558 bytes long, you might get a file called LPGTEX.GZ, which is 18,793 bytes long. If so, just rename that file as lpg.tex. But if your browser has downloaded a gzipped binary file without uncompressing it, you can uncompress it yourself as follows: With Vista, a .gz file can be opened with Winzip. If that fails, people have succeeded by downloading gzip.exe, then renaming your file from complexname.gz to SIMPLENAME.Z where SIMPLENAME has no periods, then saying "gzip -d SIMPLENAME", and finally renaming the resulting file from SIMPLENAME to complexname. Isn't Windows wonderful?
And PostScript files can be viewed with GSView (GhostScript).
is my Chinese name, given to me in 1977 by Frances Yao. Many browsers are now able to display these characters in their typeset form (高德纳); hopefully this will be routinely possible as computers and Unicode help the world to get smaller.
On March 22, 1977, as I was drafting Section 7.1 of The Art of Computer Programming, I read four papers by Peter van Emde Boas that turned out to be more appropriate for Chapter 8 than Chapter 7. I wrote a five-page memo entitled ``Notes on the van Emde Boas construction of priority deques: An instructive use of recursion,'' and sent it to Peter on March 29 (with copies also to Bob Tarjan and John Hopcroft). The final sentence was this: ``Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.'' (Here's the full story.)