NorthDallas40
Displaced Hillbilly
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2014
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I always put my old organic chem books in my work bookshelf...and of course you gotta keep The Little Brown Handbook lolBTW with the exception of a few books I won’t let out of my office most of those are reference loaners to younger engineers. I’d guess only about 1/5 to 1/7 are my actual text books. Like I said I bought most after graduation and loan them out as requested to our younger engineers to try. If they like them, they return them and buy their own copy. If they REALLY like them I never see the damn book again
Well, that explains why the calculus is still there.BTW with the exception of a few books I won’t let out of my office most of those are reference loaners to younger engineers. I’d guess only about 1/5 to 1/7 are my actual text books. Like I said I bought most after graduation and loan them out as requested to our younger engineers to try. If they like them, they return them and buy their own copy. If they REALLY like them I never see the damn book again
Which one? The red spine one? That’s an old chip mfgr reference book they used to give out as nerd swag. I believe that’s the one that has some decent fundamentals on frequency domain sampling function models as some decent basic ADC and DAC architecture reference material. And it probably is at least 30 years old.
I checked the print date. 1982 copy right. Tenth printing. It’s another sampling theory and modeling reference. That stuff hasn’t really changed much since it was invented before I was even born.The yellow one of that title on the left. All lower case is hallmark '70s - early '80s.
Here are the only Cliff Notes I currently have in my office.View attachment 230472
OK.
Scenario given, and you're back to dancing around the fact that you basically have nothing but bad feelz and "Orange man bad" in the absence of evidence of wrongdoing.
Carry on.