"Explain to me this particular section of this blog / lecture / book" is not the sort of question that will be well-received here.
First and foremost, it is unclear what exactly you failed to understand. The 134 page lecture you linked is after all specifically intended to teach you this material. If it failed to do so, then how can a short one-page answer here achieve the same, if you don't even tell at which step you failed.
Second, most people will be unwilling to load a 134 page pdf, find the section you specified, read all previous sections required to understand the terminology etc., just to be able to fuly grasp the scope of your question, let alone answer it.
So, in order to make his question into a better question, I would advice that you:
- state the problem in your own words. Anyone familiar with the general concepts, but unfamiliar with that particluar lecture, should be able to understand your question.
- state what exactly you want to achieve, what you have tried and where you failed. Saying that you "failed all the way" tells the reader nothing useful about your attempts.
- while reformulating the question in this way, make sure that it is actually ontopic here, and not better suited e.g. to cs.stackexchange.com.
You may find that while putting all this effort into the question, the quesion answers itself. That is a good thing, it means stackoverflow's magic debugging powers are working.