This manual provides a set of course materials tailored to students' needs, moving quickly where appropriate and slowly on more difficult concepts.
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This manual provides a set of course materials tailored to students' needs, moving quickly where appropriate and slowly on more difficult concepts.
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Supports Goodwill of Silicon Valley job training programs. The cover and pages are in Good condition! Any other included accessories are also in Good condition showing use. Use can included some highlighting and writing page and cover creases as well as other types visible wear.
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Very good. Connecting readers with great books since 1972! Used books may not include companion materials, and may have some shelf wear or limited writing. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!
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Good. ix, [1], 614 pages. Illustrations, Jargon and Terms, Appendices. Index Laboratory Exercises. This manual was intended to be used along with The Art of Electronics by Horowitz and Hill (Cambridge University Press, New York, 2nd ed. 1989) in an introductory electronics course. The manual includes three principal elements: laboratories exercises (23 of these); explanatory notes: one for each laboratory exercise of class; and worked examples (a total of 20). The reference materials include a glossary of frequently-used terms and jargon; review notes for each chapter, and selected data sheets (analog and digital). Tom Hayes reached electronics via a circuitous route that eventually lead to teaching Laboratory Electronics at Harvard, work that he has done for more than twenty-five years. He has also taught electronics for the Harvard Summer School, the Harvard Extension School, and for seventeen years in Boston University's Department of Physics. Paul Horowitz (born 1942) is an American physicist and electrical engineer, known primarily for his work in electronics design, as well as for his role in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (see SETI). Since 1974 he has taught a practical course in electronics whose lecture notes became one of the best known textbooks in the field: The Art of Electronics (coauthored with Winfield Hill). Horowitz holds professorial appointments at Harvard in both physics and electrical engineering. He has also served as a member of the JASON Defense Advisory Group. One of his doctoral students, John A. Howell, is now Emeritus Professor of Physics at Earlham College. This manual is both a guide and aid to users of The Art of Electronics. It is carefully organized to follow the chapters of the main text, providing extra explanatory notes, worked examples, solutions to selected exercises and laboratory exercises. Learning aids such as glossaries, reading assignments, objectives, data sheets and summaries are also included. The manual is a product of many years' teaching at Harvard University, which has given the authors direct knowledge of concepts that students find difficult. The extra explanatory detail makes this manual essential for students using The Art of Electronics.