| Their primer article [1] is also really nice. > Today, I’d like to close this gap with a couple of crisp definitions that stay clear of flawed hydraulic analogies, but also don’t get bogged down by differential equations or complex number algebra. Related: many, many years ago, when Facebook didn't exist yet, Google still passed as a "good" company, and hobbyist electronic geeks had almost only PICs to choose from, I found online a very long and complete electronic course that went from 0 to basic R/C concepts, to transistors, up to pretty advanced topics like magnets/transformers and IIRC radio too. It was made of pretty raw HTML pages and images, and what was most peculiar about it was that it managed to explain a lot of concepts up to an applicable level (as in, actually designing analog circuits) without (any?) calculus at all. Some of those may be false memories, but if I remember correctly: * Its HTML style had a yellowy background
* It was taken from an old-ish (US?) navy electric engineer-focused applied electronics course for training naval engineers.
* It was more focused on analog circuits I remember I downloaded it all but after all those years who knows where it could be. Maybe in some 1GB disk of my first Pentium PC, so it's basically lost. Does anyone in HN knows what I'm talking about? I was never able to find it again. [1] https://lcamtuf.substack.com/p/primer-core-concepts-in-elect... |
http://compatt.com/Tutorials/NEETS/NEETS.html
Content updated in 2011.