: J.B. Williams
: The Electronics Revolution Inventing the Future
: Springer-Verlag
: 9783319490885
: 1
: CHF 37.90
:
: Technik: Allgemeines, Nachschlagewerke
: English
: 293
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This book is about how electronics, computing, and telecommunications have profoundly changed our lives - the way we work, live, and play. It covers a myriad of topics from the invention of the fundamental devices, and integrated circuits, through radio and television, to computers, mobile telephones and GPS. Today our lives are ruled by electronics as they control the home and computers dominate the workspace. We walk around with mobile phones and communicate by email. Electronics didn't exist until into the twentieth century. 

The industrial revolution is the term usually applied to the coming of steam, railways and the factory system. In the twentieth century, it is electronics that has changed the way we gather our information, entertain ourselves, communicate and work. This book demonstrates that this is, in fact, another revolution. 


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John Williams took an electrical engineering degree at Imperial College, which led him into the design of electronic control and instrumentation equipment, and he became a Chartered Engineer. After working for a number of companies, including AVO/Megger and gaining seniority, he went into engineering management and later co-founded Ingenion Design Ltd to produce electronic instrumentation, exposing him to many different industries varying from washing machines to nuclear power stations.


Contents5
Acknowledgments7
Contents8
1: Introduction11
Note14
2: Missed Opportunities: The Beginnings of Electronics15
Notes23
3: From Wireless to Radio25
Notes32
4: Seeing by Electricity: Development of Television34
Notes44
5: Seeing a Hundred Miles: Radar47
Notes55
6: The ‘Box’: Television Takes Over57
Notes64
7: Spinning Discs: Recorded Music67
Notes76
8: The Crystal Triode: The Transistor79
Notes89
9: Pop Music: Youth Culture in the 1950s and 1960s91
Notes96
10: From People to Machines: The Rise of Computers97
Notes105
11: Chips into Everything: Integrated Circuits107
Notes116
12: From Signboards to Screens: Displays118
Notes126
13: Distributing Time: Clocks and Watches128
Notes134
14: From Desktop to Pocket: Calculators136
Notes144
15: Shrinking Computers: Microprocessors146
Notes154
16: Instant Cooking: Microwave Ovens155
Notes161
17: Essentials or Toys: Home Computers163
Notes170
18: Computers Take Over the Workplace172
Notes180
19: From Clerks to Xerography: Copiers181
Notes189
20: Shrinking the World: Communication Satellites190
Notes202
21: Personal Communicators: Mobile Phones204
Notes213
22: Going Online: The Internet215
Notes223
23: Glass to the Rescue: Fiber Optics225
Notes234
24: Towards Virtual Money: Cards, ATMs and PoS236
Notes243
25: Saving TV Programmes: Video Recording244
Notes251
26: Electronics Invades Photography: Digital Cameras253
Notes259
27: Seeing Inside the Body: Electronics Aids Medicine261
Notes268
28: Knowing Where You Are: GPS270
Notes278
29: The Electronics Revolution280
Notes284
ChapBM1285
Bibliography285
Index288