What Is the Fourier Transform?
Over at Quanta Magazine [Shalma Wegsman] asks What Is the Fourier Transform?
[Shalma] begins by telling you a little about Joseph Fourier, the French mathematician with an interest in heat propagation who founded the field of harmonic analysis in the early 1800s.
Fourier’s basic insight was that you can represent everything as a sum of very basic oscillations, where the basic oscillations are sine or cosine functions with certain parameters. [Shalma] explains that the biology of our ear can do a similar thing by picking the various notes out from a tune which is heard, but mathematicians and programmers work without the benefit of evolved resonant hairs and bone, they work with math and code.
[Shalma] explains how frequency components can be discovered by trial and error, multiplying candidate frequencies with the original function to see if there are large peaks, indicating the frequency is a component, or if the variations average to zero, indicating the frequency is not a component. [Shalma] tells how even square waves can be modeled with an infinite set of frequencies known as the Fourier series.
Taking a look at higher-dimensional problems [Shalma] mentions how Fourier transforms can be used for graphical compression by dropping the high frequency detail which our eyes can barely perceive anyway. [Shalma] gives us a fascinating look at the 64 graphical building blocks which can be combined to create any possible 8×8 image.
[Shalma] then mentions James Cooley and John Tukey and the development of the Fast Fourier Transform in the 1960s. This mathematical tool has been employed to study the tides, to detect gravitational waves, to develop radar and magnetic resonance imaging, and to support signal processing and data compression. Even quantum mechanics finds use for harmonic analysis, and [Shalma] explains how it relates to the uncertainty principle. The Fourier transform has spread through pure mathematics and into number theory, too.
[Shalma] closes with a quote from Charles Fefferman: “If people didn’t know about the Fourier transform, I don’t know what percent of math would then disappear, but it would be a big percent.”
If you’re interested in the Fourier transform and want to dive deeper we would encourage you to read The Fastest Fourier Transform In The West and Even Faster Fourier Transforms On The Raspbery Pi Zero.
Header image: Joseph Fourier, Attributed to Pierre-Claude Gautherot, Public domain.
Running Code On a PAX Credit Card Payment Machine
The PAX D177 PoS terminal helpfully tells you which tamper points got triggered. (Credit: Lucas Teske)
These days Points of Sale (PoS) usually include a digital payment terminal of some description, some of which are positively small, such as the Mini PoS terminals that PAX sells. Of course, since it has a CPU and a screen it must be hacked to run something else, and maybe discover something fun about the hardware in the process. Thus [Lucas Tuske] set out to do exactly this with a PAX D177 PoS, starting with purchasing three units: one to tear apart, one to bypass tamper protections on and one to keep as intact reference.
As expected, there are a few tamper protections in place, starting with pads that detect when the back cover is removed and a PCB that’s densely covered in fine traces to prevent sneaky drilling. Although tripping the tamper protections does not seem to affect the contents of the Flash, the firmware is signed. Furthermore the secrets like keys that are stored in NVRAM are purged, rendering the device effectively useless to any attacker.
The SoC that forms the brains of the whole operations is the relatively obscure MH1903, which is made by MegaHunt and comes in a dizzying number of variants that are found in applications like these PoS terminals. Fortunately the same SoC is also found on a development board with the AIR105 MCU that turns out to feature the same MH1903 core. These are ARM Cortex-M3 cores, which makes targeting them somewhat easier.
Rather than try to break the secure boot of the existing SoC, [Lucas] opted to replace the SoC package with a brand new one, which was its own adventure. Although one could say that this is cheating, it made getting a PoC of custom code running on one of these devices significantly easier. In a foll0w-up article [Lucas] expects to have Doom running on this device before long.
A Breadboard Computer in Three Chips
Building a computer on a breadboard is a seminal project for many builders, but it can become complicated quite quickly, not to mention that all the parts needed for a computer are being placed on a medium which often lends itself to loose wires and other hardware bugs. [3DSage] has a working breadboard computer that is as simple as it can possibly be, putting it together piece by piece to show exactly what’s needed to get a computer which can count, access memory, and even perform basic mathematical operations.
The first step for any computer is to build a clock, and in this case it’s being provided by a 555 timer which is configured to provide an adjustable time standard and which steps through the clock pulses when a button is pressed. The next piece is a four-bit counter and a memory chip, which lets the computer read and write data. A set of DIP switches allows a user to write data to memory, and by using the last three bits of the data as opcodes, the computer can reset, halt, and jump to various points in a simple program.
Although these three chips make it possible to perform basic programming, [3DSage] takes this a bit further in his video by demonstrating some other simple programs, such as one which can play music or behave as an alarm clock. He also shows how to use a fourth chip in the form of a binary adder to perform some basic math, and then packages it all into a retro-styled computer kit. Of course you can take these principles and build them out as far as they will go, like this full 8-bit computer built on a breadboard or even this breadboard computer that hosts a 486.
youtube.com/embed/8aiYJxvh4r0?…
‘Cop City’ case’s threat to press freedom persists despite win
Federal attacks on free speech are rightfully getting most of the headlines, but Georgia’s unprecedented attempt to prosecute dozens of “Stop Cop City” protesters as members of a racketeering enterprise was as frivolous as the worst of the Trump administration’s antics.
This week’s dismissal of conspiracy charges against these opponents of the Atlanta police training facility is welcome news. But it’s alarming that these charges lingered over 61 people’s heads for two years. And their ordeal likely isn’t over.
Ridiculous indictment
Rather than filing charges aimed at individual alleged acts of arson, vandalism, or other actual crimes, prosecutors tried to rope together dozens of activists into one sprawling case under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. The indictment didn’t even attempt to connect the dots between most defendants’ constitutionally protected speech and a handful of defendants’ alleged bad acts.
Why would prosecutors want to do that instead of just charging the lawbreakers? Primarily, because the prosecution wasn’t intended to punish illegality but to kill a movement. Charging only those who broke actual laws wouldn’t achieve that aim, so they got to work making up new ones.
Secondarily, because they’re vindictive dirtbags. To prove it, they chose the date of George Floyd’s murder as the start date of their fabricated “conspiracy,” even though plans for Cop City hadn’t even been announced yet when Floyd was killed.
Prosecutors pointed to the defendants’ alleged anarchist political philosophy, their publications, their social media posts, their constitutionally protected recording of police, their use of encryption and VPNs to communicate securely, and even their holding news conferences and talking to reporters — all as “proof” that they were each part of a criminal enterprise.
The theory goes that, if one anarchist writes an essay about the environmental impact of Cop City and another anarchist sets a police car on fire, then both anarchists effectively struck the match together. Or something like that. It’s too incoherent to make any sense of.
Chilling effect on both journalists and sources
By the prosecution’s logic, journalists who covered the protests could be portrayed as helping to “advance” a RICO conspiracy simply by giving activists a platform. Write about the movement, and you (and your sources) might become part of the case file. This time, they only went after writers who participated in the Stop Cop City movement, but what about next time?
The harm extends beyond direct impact on reporters. Newsmakers and whistleblowers will surely be wary of talking to journalists if they know prosecutors view doing so — and particularly doing so securely via encrypted messaging — as an act in furtherance of a conspiracy.
This week’s win doesn’t undo the harm, either to free speech or to the defendants’ lives (many say they’ve been unable to find housing or jobs due to the long-pending case). The court’s forthcoming dismissal order seems likely to be limited to procedural grounds — prosecutors neglected to get required authorization from the governor to bring the charges. Deputy Attorney General John Fowler, the lead prosecutor on the case, said he’ll appeal.
Prosecutors must know they’re unlikely to ultimately secure a conviction, much less one that higher courts will uphold. Even if the appellate courts give them a path to get past this week’s procedural dismissal, they’ll still have to reckon with the Constitution and the fact that their legal and factual theories are as flimsy as they come.
But the longer they can stretch the case out, the longer uncertainty will linger about whether a law intended to counter organized crime can be distorted to stifle protest movements. And the more reluctant critics of Cop City will be to speak to journalists whose reporting might clarify the goals of their movement and contradict law enforcement narratives.
Plenty of experts have explained how RICO laws are rife with abuse, even when used for their intended purpose. The Cop City case makes clear that the need for reform isn’t just a criminal justice issue; it’s a free speech one as well.
Help us stop attacks on journalists and transparency
Dear Friend of Press Freedom,
For 171 days, Rümeysa Öztürk has faced deportation by the United States government for writing an op-ed it didn’t like, and for 90 days, Mario Guevara has been imprisoned for covering a protest.
Our newsletters are taking a short break next week, but we’ll be back. Explore our archive for more press freedom stories.
Take action to stop attacks on journalists and transparency
People often ask how to support the causes we fight for other than donating. Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) has a new action center to allow you to do just that by writing or calling members of Congress to tell them that the public cares about press freedom.
This week we launched the first two actions — one to tell lawmakers to stop the decimation of the Freedom of Information Act and the other to encourage them to do something (besides the same old empty expressions of concern) about the massacre of journalists in Gaza. We plan to expand the action center, including by taking on locally targeted initiatives. Please use this easy, new tool to help us make a difference — and still donate if you can, of course.
CBS’s real bias monitor is Donald Trump
CBS announced this week that it’s hiring Kenneth Weinstein — a career partisan — as its “bias ombudsman.” FPF Director of Advocacy Seth Stern wrote for The Guardian that while CBS has a constitutional right to monitor bias as it sees fit, it’s a different story when the government gets involved.
The creation of the ombudsman role was one of many capitulations CBS’s owners made to the Trump administration to persuade the Federal Communications Commission to approve the Paramount-Skydance merger. And based on comments from the administration, it fully intends to use its foothold inside CBS’s newsroom to bend its reporting to its liking. Read more here.
‘Cop City’ case’s threat to press freedom persists despite win
Federal attacks on free speech are rightfully getting most of the headlines, but Georgia’s unprecedented attempt to prosecute dozens of “Stop Cop City” protesters as members of a racketeering enterprise was as frivolous as the worst of the Trump administration’s antics.
This week’s dismissal of conspiracy charges against these opponents of the Atlanta police training facility is welcome news. But it’s alarming that these charges lingered over 61 people’s heads for two years. Their ordeal likely isn’t over, and neither is the chilling effect on journalism and whistleblowing that the case has caused. Read more here.
Will 9/11 records be declassified?
Next year marks the 25th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, and “a substantial body of records” about the event remains classified.
In theory, these records should automatically be declassified when they turn 25 in 2026. But this won’t happen with the 9/11 records, just as it hasn’t happened with other historically significant records, like the John F. Kennedy assassination records, which the public had to wait over 60 years to read.
It doesn’t have to be this way. Read more in The Classifieds.
Judge isn’t buying excuses for attacks on LA reporters
A group of journalists and others won a preliminary injunction in federal court on Sept. 11, 2025, placing new restrictions on the Los Angeles Police Department’s violent tactics while policing protests. The day before, they won a similar order against the Department of Homeland Security.
U.S. District Judge Hernán Vera outlined the decades-long history of press freedom abuses at protests in LA and said that “the First Amendment demands better.” We couldn’t agree more. Read more from FPF’s U.S. Press Freedom Tracker.
What we’re reading
Investigative reporter told to stop contacting police in California city (U.S. Press Freedom Tracker). You’d think police would’ve learned to stop messing with journalist Ben Camacho after the City of Los Angeles had to cut him a check for wasting his time with a frivolous lawsuit for publishing public records that they gave him.
China didn’t want you to see this video of Xi and Putin. So Reuters deleted it (The Intercept). When news outlets don’t resist censorship, “journalism’s independence “sinks to the lowest common denominator whenever news of global importance breaks in a country governed by a repressive regime,” Stern told The Intercept.
A tipping point at CBS News (Columbia Journalism Review). An alarming account of corporate meddling in CBS News’ editorial decisions, under new and old ownership alike, to appease the Trump administration and avoid criticizing Israel. And with CBS’s ownership now looking to buy CNN’s parent company, it’s unlikely to stop.
Cindy Cohn is leaving EFF, but not the fight for digital rights (WIRED). A giant in the civil liberties field! We all owe a debt of gratitude to Cindy Cohn for her indelible leadership at the Electronic Frontier Foundation for so many years (and for being our legal counsel at FPF since our founding in 2012).
Kansas prisons reject newspaper subscriptions, blindsiding publishers and cutting off information (Kansas Reflector). We can’t wait to hear Kansas prison officials explain how newspaper subscriptions threaten incarcerated people’s safety.
Boos of Donald Trump heard on ABC’s broadcast of US Open. Good (USA Today). Shame on the U.S. Tennis Association for demanding broadcasters to censor crowd reactions to Trump’s attendance of the U.S. Open men’s tennis final in New York on Sunday.
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This week, we discuss "free speech," keeping stupid thoughts in one's own head, and cancel culture.
This week, we discuss "free speech," keeping stupid thoughts in onex27;s own head, and cancel culture.#BehindTheBlog
An email sent to NBCUniversal employees, including journalists at NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, Bravo and more, eulogizes Charlie Kirk as an "advocate for open debate" and reminds staff that even milquetoast statements about Kirk's death can result in their firing.#CharlieKirk #Journalism
Caterina Bartoli e la Cellula Coscioni diCagliari – Festival della Psichedelia
Caterina Bartoli, medico chirurgo, membro di SIMEPSI e consulente scientifico dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni, interverrà come relatrice alla prima edizione del Festival della Psichedelia, dedicato a riflessioni sulla medicina psichedelica e sugli stati di coscienza.
Teatro Massimo di Cagliari (Sale M2 e M3)
26 e 27 settembre 2025
Il festival, organizzato dalla Rete Teatro Massimo con il sostegno della Fondazione di Sardegna e di Cassa Deposito e Prestiti, nasce come naturale prosecuzione del progetto “Metamorfosi, filosofia e medicina in scena”. Due giornate di incontri, dialoghi, visioni e laboratori che intrecciano neuroscienze, filosofia, antropologia, salute mentale ed esperienze artistiche, con l’obiettivo di promuovere una riflessione consapevole sul ruolo della medicina psichedelica.
Protagonista anche la Cellula Coscioni Cagliari, presente per tutta la durata del festival con un banchetto informativo e di raccolta firme. Sarà possibile sostenere le iniziative dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni e in particolare la campagna psychedelicare.eu, che punta a promuovere un dibattito pubblico e scientifico sulla medicina psichedelica.
Tra gli ospiti: Georgia Wilson Jones, Silvano Tagliagambe, Matteo Buonarroti, Michele Metelli, Paolo Pecere, Federico di Vita, Jean Paul Rességuier, Luciano Tacconi, Riccardo Badini, Maria Antonietta De Luca, Marco Leonti, Gionata Stancher, Alessandro Gelao, Tania Re, Andrea Piva e molti altri.
Info biglietti: vivaticket.com – Biglietteria Teatro Massimo Cagliari (via De Magistris 12, tel. 345 4894565).
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Filomena Gallo partecipa alla tavola rotonda “I diritti negati”, all’interno del Congresso di AreaDG a Genova
Filomena Gallo, Segretaria Nazionale di Associazione Luca Coscioni per la libertà di ricerca scientifica APS, partecipa alla tavola rotonda I DIRITTI NEGATI, all’interno del quinto Congresso nazionale di AreaDG, “La forza del diritto”. Conduce Serena BORTONE, intervengono insieme a lei: Maurizio LANDINI (CGIL), Gabriella LUCCIOLI (magistrata), Rita BERNARDINI (Nessuno tocchi Caino) e don MATTIA (cappellano Mediterranea ‘Human Rights’).
L’appuntamento è per venerdì 10 ottobre alle ore 15.45 presso il Teatro della Tosse, in Piazza Renato Negri, 6, a Genova.
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Chiara Lalli a Montecitorio – Presentazione del report “Aborto senza numeri”
Chiara Lalli a Montecitorio – Presentazione del report Aborto senza numeri
Chiara Lalli, bioeticista, giornalista e consigliera generale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni, interverrà come relatrice alla presentazione del report Aborto senza numeri. L’assenza di dati come politica di deterrenza e causa di disuguaglianza.
Sala Stampa Camera dei Deputati, Palazzo Montecitorio – Via della Missione 4, Roma
Martedì 23 settembre 2025
Ore 11:30
Il report, realizzato da Medici del Mondo Italia, affronta il tema dell’accesso all’interruzione volontaria di gravidanza e delle conseguenze derivanti dalla mancanza di trasparenza e di raccolta dati ufficiali, che alimentano disuguaglianze e ostacoli per le donne.
Intervengono:
- Elisa Visconti, Direttrice di Medici del Mondo Italia
- Chiara Lalli, Bioeticista e consigliera generale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni
- Federica di Martino (@IVGstobenissimo), Psicoterapeuta e Attivista
- Gilda Sportiello, Deputata Movimento 5 Stelle
Modera: Claudia Torrisi, Giornalista e co-autrice del report
L’iniziativa è promossa da Medici del Mondo Italia.
Info & Accrediti:
Ufficio stampa Medici del Mondo
Daniela Biffi 347 2613441
Noemi Cervi 346 8433966
L’accesso alla sala – con abbigliamento consono per tutti e obbligo di giacca per
gli uomini – è consentito fino al raggiungimento della capienza massima accreditandosi a ufficiostampa@medicidelmondo.it.
I giornalisti e gli operatori video devono accreditarsi allo stesso indirizzo elencando anche l’utilizzo eventuale di attrezzature tecniche. La conferenza stampa sarà disponibile in streaming sulla webtv della Camera.
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Solidarietà al Centro Sociale “La Strada” di Roma
Marco Perduca e Antonia “Fiore” Faustini manifestano la loro solidarietà e quella dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni e della Cellula di Roma al Centro Sociale “La Strada” contro cui, alle 4.30 del mattino del 12 settembre, è stata lanciata una “bomba carta. Da ottobre 2023 il centro è stato oggetto di aggressioni, minacce, imbrattamenti, danneggiamenti, fino ad attacchi esplosivi, un altro a maggio scorso.
“Negli anni” dicono Perduca e Faustini “sono molte le iniziative dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni ospitate e co-promosse da chi anima il centro, un luogo aperto al pubblico che, tra le altre cose, offre sostegno alla popolazione bisognosa. Dal fine vita all’aborto, passando per testamento biologico, terapie psichedeliche e presentazioni di libri l’Associazione e la Cellula di Roma hanno sempre trovato ascolo e collaborazione. Ci auguriamo che quanto prima venga scoperto chi si è reso responsabile di questi attacchi”.
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Addio Baldomero Cáceres, raro intellettuale antiproibizionista militante
Abbiamo appreso solo da poco “scrivono Marco Cappato e Marco Perduca “che il 15 giugno scorso Baldomero Cáceres Santa María è morto a Lima all’età di 93 anni. Psicologo e ricercatore molto critico del ruolo che la psichiatria aveva giocato nella definizione dell’architettura proibizionista internazionale, Baldo era uno raro esempio di intellettuale antiproibizionista militante che non perdeva occasione per dimostrare come la proibizione della cannabis prima e della foglia di coca poi fossero non solo anti-scientifiche ma anche violazioni dei diritti umani e delle tradizioni e culture ancestrali.
“Abbiamo conosciuto Baldo alla fine degli anni ‘90 tramite Dave Borden della DRCNet Foundation, grazie alle sue conoscenze, nelle nostre visite in Perù abbiamo incontrato pensatori, parlamentari e campesinos determinati nella lotta per ricordare al mondo che “coca non è cocaina”.
Negli anni ’70, mentre viveva a Cusco e lavorava all’Università Nazionale di San Antonio Abad, incontrò l’etnostorico Jan Szemiski che gli insegnò a masticare le foglie di coca. Dopo aver scoperto la pianta e averne sperimentato i benefici che gli permettevano di ridurre mal di testa, insufficienza respiratoria e disturbi gastrici legati al cambio di altitudine, iniziò la sua ricerca sulla storia e le proprietà delle sue piante. Dopo la pubblicazione di un articolo intitolato “Coca, il mondo andino e gli estirpatori di idolatrie del XX secolo” sul quotidiano La Prensa nel 1977, iniziò la sua attività in difesa della foglia di coca.
“Baldomero aveva partecipato alla riunione fondativa della Lega Internazionale Antiproibizionista di Atene di 35 anni fa e da allora non ha perso occasione di perorare la causa della legalizzazione della marihuana e della foglia di coca. Baldo era uno degli ultimi intellettuali della memoria orale, auspichiamo che chi gli è stato vicino per anni possa trovare tempo e risorse per raggruppare il suo pensiero in modo multimediale”.
L'articolo Addio Baldomero Cáceres, raro intellettuale antiproibizionista militante proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.
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