Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by rememberlenny 1836 days ago
The author, Hunter Scott, has been working on everything from plants to farming on Mars to long-distance wireless power-charging electronics.

I spent the last decade tinkering with software/hardware projects. This book is exactly what I wish I had when diving in.

Note: I have no connection to the book. I just really like the author's work.

Edit: The digital book is free.

1 comments

It's pick-your-price with no minimum, so there is imo some shaming involved if you actually specify $0 and download it for free. That makes advertising it as a free download a little bit iffy. Also, they want your email address for the download.

The book does sound promising though I really liked the 2nd edition of Horowitz and Hill back in the day (I haven't seen the new 3rd ed. yet). It seems like a tough act to follow.

Added: looks like the book is a 110MB download that you have to download with a browser (javascript link). Can't use wget. Any chance of a direct link to a pdf?

Added: I've spent a few minutes flipping through, and it looks like a very practical book whose subject matter is nothing at all like what I expected (e.g. like Horowitz and Hill). There's nothing about Ohm's Law or transistor gains or anything like that. It's about how to build and test shippable electronic products: that is, you can already design and build the gadget on your workbench, but now you have to get it ready for manufacture, testing, etc. It warns you to take Chinese New Year into account if you're working with contract manufacturers in China, etc.

It's a normal-looking PDF of about 300 pages containing seemingly normal text (there might be some diagrams here and there). I have no idea why it's 110MB instead of say 1MB. On today's computers it is still manageable, but it's yet more bloat.

The author himself is advertising the digital copy as free on his website.