Books : Engineering Our Digital Future: The Infinity Project

In association with Amazon.com
 View Shopping Cart or Checkout 

Author name: Geoffrey C. Orsak, Sally L. Wood, Scott C. Douglas, David C. Munson, John R. Treichler, Ravindra A. Athale, Mark W. Yoder

 : Engineering Our Digital Future: The Infinity Project
View Bigger Picture

Discount Price: $82.00
Price fluctuation possible.

Used Price: $13.99
Third Party New Price: $28.99


How soon does it ship: Normal ship time within one day



Shipping? Absolutely FREE if you qualify for Super Saver Shipping.
Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 643
EAN num: 9780130354822
ISBN number: 0130354821
Label: Prentice Hall
Manufacturer: Prentice Hall
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 494
Printing Date: July 24, 2003
Publishing house: Prentice Hall
Sale Popularity Level: 110360
Studio: Prentice Hall




Accessories: Other books you might be interested in perusing:

Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
This book, Engineering Our Digital Future, plus a broad spectrum of supplemental materials, classroom technology, and a comprehensive instructor training program—work in concert to motivate users to learn about the infinite possibilities of technology and engineering in today's world. Developed by a national team led by Southern Methodist University and Texas Instruments, this book is the very first of its kind in the country. Chapter topics include: The World of Modern Engineering; Creating Digital Music; Making Digital Images; Math You Can See; Digitizing the World; Coding Information for Storage and Secrecy; Communicating with Ones and Zeros; Networks from the Telegraph to the Internet; and The Big Picture. A new outlook into the possibilities of technology and engineering for beginner engineers.



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent book
I think it is a great book. DSP education has suffered by not having this level of material presented and understood before diving into the blizzard of equations that characterises most peoples very first exposure to DSP education. Also, its goal of reaching high school students is filling the need of providing a basic literacy in the digital nature of daily life that is sorely needed.

The presentation is clear. It uses aspects of technology that touch peoples lives, so they aren't remote or unapproachable. I think it is very positive in promoting electronics as an area where females as well as males can be comfortable participating. The topic areas were selected to peak interest, the very first step toward learning. And although the book intended to lay basic groundwork, it does it with a clear eye toward paving the way to more advanced investigations, and strikes good compromises about the depth to go into, so that introductions are made to techniques that will be major themes in later study.

It is also an attractive book. It is colorful and inviting.

I disagree with another reviewer that it is has hype for engineering. It is compelling and elicits enthusiasm. How can that be a flaw in a textbook?!



Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - Interesting Approach
This book is the outcome of a collaboration called "The Infinity Project" between Southern Methodist University, the government and Texas Instruments. It is intended to be an interesting introduction to current leading-edge digital technologies. For vehicles it uses digital music (a digital band), digital images (acquiring an image, and a robot eye), digital multimedia records (a digital yearbook and a digital backpack, or personal data assistant), digital transmission, and network design. There is a web site at http://www.infinity-project.org/.

The strong point of this collection of projects is its design orientation. It begins with a distinction between scientists (creators of explanation) and engineers (creators of solutions for needs). It presents math and physics just-in-time, as parts of design problems and illustrates (with fair success) a common paradigm for pursuing such problems.

Weak points of the collection are wordiness, some repetition, and a lack of justification or qualification of some general remarks. For example, a "nine-step" design algorithm is proposed with inadequate development or discussion.

Excessive enthusiasm leads to some annoying hype to support engineering. An example of the book's myopia regarding creativity is a discusion of a design problem to "create a digital system that can produce award-winning movies from scratch by simply using a few suggestive keywords typed in by a user". This project sees creativity in the design of the system, but not in creating a movie - all you have to do is "paint by numbers" using a huge inventory of snipets. Other professions also may feel minimized.

Overall, the book provides a nice feel for engineering, and for the use of math in solving engineering problems. It clearly shows the inquiring nature of creativity and the extension of common sense to penetrate complex issues. The ideas of constraints and trade-offs are made clear.

This book appears aimed at precocious high-school students or at first-year engineering courses either for engineers or for those that want a flavor of what engineering is. The authors have not explicitly stated their target audience, but the infinity web site suggests "high school and early college engineering curriculum".



Find other books like this one:

 


Treatment For Enbrel Psoriasis / How Can I Remedy Anxiety Attacks / The Bee-man 0f 0rn / Black Jack / Surgery /
The Jungle Book Mowgli Jessica Mcclintock Wedding Gowns Learn Arabic Sherlock Holmes Dr Watson Birthday Gift Personalized Love Gifts Executive Business Gift Merchandise Autism Society.org Kids Books Alice And Wonderland Wizard Of Oz Wav

Home - Trains - Planes - Ships - Transportation