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__NOTOC__
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/jennifer-esposito/index.html
This is the wiki portion of {{Dror}} Bar-Natan's [http://www.math.toronto.edu/~drorbn web site]. It is not a standalone page - it has no overall tree structure and there is no specific entry point. Rather it is just the common location for those of for my pages that could benefit from being editable by others and/or from having their history preserved and/or by having an associated "[[Talk:Main_Page|discussion]]" page.
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/melissa-george/index.html

http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/jennifer-connelly/index.html
Ok. Here are some of the pages here anyway:
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/jennifer-esposito/index.html

http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/kelly-lynch/index.html
{{Paperlets Navigation}}
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/christina-ricci/index.html

http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/jill-ritchie/index.html
===Blackboards===
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/kelli-garner/index.html
These are blackboards that I've seen or filled and for one reason or another, wanted to preserve.
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/ashley-scott/index.html
* [[16 Definitions of the Alexander Polynomial]], Toronto January 17 2007, with Zsuzsi Dancso.
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/kelly-lynch/index.html

http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/kelli-garner/index.html
===Cheat Sheets===
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/leila-arcieri/index.html
[[Image:The MOY Invariant - Feb 2006.jpg|thumb|right|120px|MOY]]
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/leila-arcieri/index.html
[[Image:Multivariable Alexander - December 2006.jpg|thumb|right|120px|Multivariable Alexander]]
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/miranda-otto/index.html
A ''cheat sheet'' is a very short (usually one page or less) informal note (often with more diagrams and formulas than words) containing the essence of a complicated definition, construction or proof for easy reference at later dates. A well designed cheat sheet may not be readable for an outsider - it is not a paper and not even a [[paperlet]]. But it should be readable by its author (and possibly his/her close collaborators) for at least a few years after it was written assuming normal memory and brain cell loss. It should be reasonably (and sometimes, very) accurate in as much as normalizations and conventions are concerned, as often the main purpose of a cheat sheet is to keep track of those. No originality is ever claimed yet credits may be sparse.
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/michelle-trachtenberg/index.html

http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/melissa-george/index.html
* [[Media:The MOY Invariant - Feb 2006.jpg|The MOY Invariant]], February 2006, by {{Dror}}.
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/lauren-graham/index.html
* [[Media:Multivariable Alexander - December 2006.jpg|The Multivariable Alexander Polynomial]], December 2006, by Jana Archibald.
http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/miranda-otto/index.html

http://usa-celebs.usafreespace.com/kelli-garner/index.html
===Projects===
* [[VasCalc - A Vassiliev Invariants Calculator]].
* [[HoriAsso - Computing a Horizontal Associator]].

=== Classes ===
[[07-401]], [[07-1352]], [[06-240]], [[06-1350]].

===Other===
* [[Survey of Finite Type Invariants]].
* [[CMS Winter 2006 Session on Knot Homologies]].
* [[2009 Knot Theory Program at the Fields Institute]].
* [[An Algebraic Number]].

Revision as of 12:56, 23 February 2007

This is the wiki portion of Dror Bar-Natan's web site. It is not a standalone page - it has no overall tree structure and there is no specific entry point. Rather it is just the common location for those of for my pages that could benefit from being editable by others and/or from having their history preserved and/or by having an associated "discussion" page.

Ok. Here are some of the pages here anyway:

Blackboards

These are blackboards that I've seen or filled and for one reason or another, wanted to preserve.

Cheat Sheets

A cheat sheet is a very short (usually one page or less) informal note (often with more diagrams and formulas than words) containing the essence of a complicated definition, construction or proof for easy reference at later dates. A well designed cheat sheet may not be readable for an outsider - it is not a paper and not even a paperlet. But it should be readable by its author (and possibly his/her close collaborators) for at least a few years after it was written assuming normal memory and brain cell loss. It should be reasonably (and sometimes, very) accurate in as much as normalizations and conventions are concerned, as often the main purpose of a cheat sheet is to keep track of those. No originality is ever claimed yet credits may be sparse.

Projects

Classes

07-401, 07-1352, 06-240, 06-1350.

Other