Derek Cheung, Eric Brach
Conquering the Electron
The Geniuses, Visionaries, Egomaniacs, and Scoundrels Who Built Our Electronic Age
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Derek Cheung, Eric Brach
Conquering the Electron
The Geniuses, Visionaries, Egomaniacs, and Scoundrels Who Built Our Electronic Age
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Conquering the Electron offers readers a true and engaging history of the world of electronics, beginning with the discoveries of friction and magnetism and ending with the creation of the smart phone and the iPad.
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Conquering the Electron offers readers a true and engaging history of the world of electronics, beginning with the discoveries of friction and magnetism and ending with the creation of the smart phone and the iPad.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Februar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 534g
- ISBN-13: 9781493049929
- ISBN-10: 1493049925
- Artikelnr.: 57169295
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Februar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 534g
- ISBN-13: 9781493049929
- ISBN-10: 1493049925
- Artikelnr.: 57169295
Dr. Derek Cheung is a scientist turned businessman with a lifetime of experience in the fields of science and technology. He received his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from Purdue University and his M.S. and Ph.D. in the same field from Stanford. Derek spent four years working as a research engineer at Fairchild Semiconductor, the company that gave birth to Silicon Valley, before making a career as president and CEO of Rockwell Scientific, a successful high-tech company transformed from a major corporate R&D lab. He lives in Thousand Oaks, California. Eric Brach is a lecturer in English at West Los Angeles College in Culver City, California. He is the author of Billy "the Hill" and the Jump Hook and has been a contributor to national magazines, newspapers, and academic journals, including Bleacher Report, Box Office, and The Onion. He lives in Culver City, California.
Part I: Age of Electromagnetism 1 The Knowledge Foundation The Beginning
Scientific Method The Magic of Static Electricity The Battery Linking
Electricity and Magnetism Faraday, the Grand Master Maxwell, the Peerless
Genius 2 The Telegraph Messages Sent by Electric Current Annihilating the
Time-Space Barrier Wire Across the Atlantic Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code Impact 3 The Telephone Voices Carried Over Wire Building the
Telephone Business Patent Battle of the Century Sound of Music 4 Wireless
Telegraphy Hertz and the Electromagnetic Waves Marconi and the Wireless
Crossing the Ocean Blue 5 Lighting and Electrification Electrical Lighting
Systems Generators and Motors The AC-DC War Impact of Electrification
Edison, Tesla, and Siemens One Hundred Years of Electromagnetism Part II:
Age of Vacuum Electronics 6 Current Flow in a Vacuum Cathode Rays The
Electron Exposed The Puzzle of Penetrative Light The Legacy of Vacuum
Electronics 7 Controlling the Flow of Electrons The Edison Effect The
Vacuum Diode The Magical Third Electrode Voices Across the Continent 8
Radio Christmas Eve, 1904 Core Radio Technology RCA and Sarnoff Armstrong's
Tragedy 9 Television Transmitting Video through the Air A Farm Boy from
Utah and a Russian Émigré The Intellectual Property Battle 10 Radar
Clairvoyance Hunting the Submarine The Most Valuable Luggage Radio
Navigation The Microwave World 11 Computer The Calculating Machine ENIAC
Foundation of Computer Architecture Framework for the Future Part III: Age
of Solid-State Electronics 12 The Semiconductor Bell Labs Kelly's Foresight
The Unpredictable Semiconductor 13 The Birth of the Transistor The
Flamboyant Genius Conceptualizing a Solid-State Triode Forging a Better
Semiconductor Discovery of the p-n Junction Roadblocks The Great
Breakthrough The Roll-Out . . . . . . And the Fight Shockley's Last Laugh
The Zeal of Teal and the Élan of Pfann Resolution 14 Launching the
Electronics Industry Sharing Technology New Players The Debut of Silicon
The Transistor Radio Japanese Pioneers The Transistor Era Begins 15 The
Dawn of Silicon Valley Wall Street Journal or Physical Review? Shockley and
the Traitorous Eight The Birth of Venture Capital The Changing of the Guard
16 The Integrated Circuit and the Chip Kilby and the First Integrated
Circuit Hoerni and the Planar Process Noyce and the Chip Fairchild and the
Silicon Valley Phenomenon 17 Chip Technology Blossoms The Early Market for
Chips Moore's Law Memory Chips Microprocessor-ENIAC on a chip The Personal
Computer Unleashed Ubiquitous Silicon 18 Evolution of the Electronics
Industry Competitors from Asia Computer-Aided Design The Foundries of
Taiwan Noyce, Moore, and Grove Turning Silicon Into Gold 19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal Displays Luminescent Semiconductors
Semiconductor Lasers Fiber Optic Communications Liquid Crystal Displays 20
The Information Age and Beyond Putting It All Together The Information
Revolution Globalization Looking Ahead Appendix I: Further Reading Appendix
II: Summary of Key "Conquerors of the Electron"
Scientific Method The Magic of Static Electricity The Battery Linking
Electricity and Magnetism Faraday, the Grand Master Maxwell, the Peerless
Genius 2 The Telegraph Messages Sent by Electric Current Annihilating the
Time-Space Barrier Wire Across the Atlantic Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code Impact 3 The Telephone Voices Carried Over Wire Building the
Telephone Business Patent Battle of the Century Sound of Music 4 Wireless
Telegraphy Hertz and the Electromagnetic Waves Marconi and the Wireless
Crossing the Ocean Blue 5 Lighting and Electrification Electrical Lighting
Systems Generators and Motors The AC-DC War Impact of Electrification
Edison, Tesla, and Siemens One Hundred Years of Electromagnetism Part II:
Age of Vacuum Electronics 6 Current Flow in a Vacuum Cathode Rays The
Electron Exposed The Puzzle of Penetrative Light The Legacy of Vacuum
Electronics 7 Controlling the Flow of Electrons The Edison Effect The
Vacuum Diode The Magical Third Electrode Voices Across the Continent 8
Radio Christmas Eve, 1904 Core Radio Technology RCA and Sarnoff Armstrong's
Tragedy 9 Television Transmitting Video through the Air A Farm Boy from
Utah and a Russian Émigré The Intellectual Property Battle 10 Radar
Clairvoyance Hunting the Submarine The Most Valuable Luggage Radio
Navigation The Microwave World 11 Computer The Calculating Machine ENIAC
Foundation of Computer Architecture Framework for the Future Part III: Age
of Solid-State Electronics 12 The Semiconductor Bell Labs Kelly's Foresight
The Unpredictable Semiconductor 13 The Birth of the Transistor The
Flamboyant Genius Conceptualizing a Solid-State Triode Forging a Better
Semiconductor Discovery of the p-n Junction Roadblocks The Great
Breakthrough The Roll-Out . . . . . . And the Fight Shockley's Last Laugh
The Zeal of Teal and the Élan of Pfann Resolution 14 Launching the
Electronics Industry Sharing Technology New Players The Debut of Silicon
The Transistor Radio Japanese Pioneers The Transistor Era Begins 15 The
Dawn of Silicon Valley Wall Street Journal or Physical Review? Shockley and
the Traitorous Eight The Birth of Venture Capital The Changing of the Guard
16 The Integrated Circuit and the Chip Kilby and the First Integrated
Circuit Hoerni and the Planar Process Noyce and the Chip Fairchild and the
Silicon Valley Phenomenon 17 Chip Technology Blossoms The Early Market for
Chips Moore's Law Memory Chips Microprocessor-ENIAC on a chip The Personal
Computer Unleashed Ubiquitous Silicon 18 Evolution of the Electronics
Industry Competitors from Asia Computer-Aided Design The Foundries of
Taiwan Noyce, Moore, and Grove Turning Silicon Into Gold 19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal Displays Luminescent Semiconductors
Semiconductor Lasers Fiber Optic Communications Liquid Crystal Displays 20
The Information Age and Beyond Putting It All Together The Information
Revolution Globalization Looking Ahead Appendix I: Further Reading Appendix
II: Summary of Key "Conquerors of the Electron"
Part I: Age of Electromagnetism 1 The Knowledge Foundation The Beginning
Scientific Method The Magic of Static Electricity The Battery Linking
Electricity and Magnetism Faraday, the Grand Master Maxwell, the Peerless
Genius 2 The Telegraph Messages Sent by Electric Current Annihilating the
Time-Space Barrier Wire Across the Atlantic Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code Impact 3 The Telephone Voices Carried Over Wire Building the
Telephone Business Patent Battle of the Century Sound of Music 4 Wireless
Telegraphy Hertz and the Electromagnetic Waves Marconi and the Wireless
Crossing the Ocean Blue 5 Lighting and Electrification Electrical Lighting
Systems Generators and Motors The AC-DC War Impact of Electrification
Edison, Tesla, and Siemens One Hundred Years of Electromagnetism Part II:
Age of Vacuum Electronics 6 Current Flow in a Vacuum Cathode Rays The
Electron Exposed The Puzzle of Penetrative Light The Legacy of Vacuum
Electronics 7 Controlling the Flow of Electrons The Edison Effect The
Vacuum Diode The Magical Third Electrode Voices Across the Continent 8
Radio Christmas Eve, 1904 Core Radio Technology RCA and Sarnoff Armstrong's
Tragedy 9 Television Transmitting Video through the Air A Farm Boy from
Utah and a Russian Émigré The Intellectual Property Battle 10 Radar
Clairvoyance Hunting the Submarine The Most Valuable Luggage Radio
Navigation The Microwave World 11 Computer The Calculating Machine ENIAC
Foundation of Computer Architecture Framework for the Future Part III: Age
of Solid-State Electronics 12 The Semiconductor Bell Labs Kelly's Foresight
The Unpredictable Semiconductor 13 The Birth of the Transistor The
Flamboyant Genius Conceptualizing a Solid-State Triode Forging a Better
Semiconductor Discovery of the p-n Junction Roadblocks The Great
Breakthrough The Roll-Out . . . . . . And the Fight Shockley's Last Laugh
The Zeal of Teal and the Élan of Pfann Resolution 14 Launching the
Electronics Industry Sharing Technology New Players The Debut of Silicon
The Transistor Radio Japanese Pioneers The Transistor Era Begins 15 The
Dawn of Silicon Valley Wall Street Journal or Physical Review? Shockley and
the Traitorous Eight The Birth of Venture Capital The Changing of the Guard
16 The Integrated Circuit and the Chip Kilby and the First Integrated
Circuit Hoerni and the Planar Process Noyce and the Chip Fairchild and the
Silicon Valley Phenomenon 17 Chip Technology Blossoms The Early Market for
Chips Moore's Law Memory Chips Microprocessor-ENIAC on a chip The Personal
Computer Unleashed Ubiquitous Silicon 18 Evolution of the Electronics
Industry Competitors from Asia Computer-Aided Design The Foundries of
Taiwan Noyce, Moore, and Grove Turning Silicon Into Gold 19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal Displays Luminescent Semiconductors
Semiconductor Lasers Fiber Optic Communications Liquid Crystal Displays 20
The Information Age and Beyond Putting It All Together The Information
Revolution Globalization Looking Ahead Appendix I: Further Reading Appendix
II: Summary of Key "Conquerors of the Electron"
Scientific Method The Magic of Static Electricity The Battery Linking
Electricity and Magnetism Faraday, the Grand Master Maxwell, the Peerless
Genius 2 The Telegraph Messages Sent by Electric Current Annihilating the
Time-Space Barrier Wire Across the Atlantic Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code Impact 3 The Telephone Voices Carried Over Wire Building the
Telephone Business Patent Battle of the Century Sound of Music 4 Wireless
Telegraphy Hertz and the Electromagnetic Waves Marconi and the Wireless
Crossing the Ocean Blue 5 Lighting and Electrification Electrical Lighting
Systems Generators and Motors The AC-DC War Impact of Electrification
Edison, Tesla, and Siemens One Hundred Years of Electromagnetism Part II:
Age of Vacuum Electronics 6 Current Flow in a Vacuum Cathode Rays The
Electron Exposed The Puzzle of Penetrative Light The Legacy of Vacuum
Electronics 7 Controlling the Flow of Electrons The Edison Effect The
Vacuum Diode The Magical Third Electrode Voices Across the Continent 8
Radio Christmas Eve, 1904 Core Radio Technology RCA and Sarnoff Armstrong's
Tragedy 9 Television Transmitting Video through the Air A Farm Boy from
Utah and a Russian Émigré The Intellectual Property Battle 10 Radar
Clairvoyance Hunting the Submarine The Most Valuable Luggage Radio
Navigation The Microwave World 11 Computer The Calculating Machine ENIAC
Foundation of Computer Architecture Framework for the Future Part III: Age
of Solid-State Electronics 12 The Semiconductor Bell Labs Kelly's Foresight
The Unpredictable Semiconductor 13 The Birth of the Transistor The
Flamboyant Genius Conceptualizing a Solid-State Triode Forging a Better
Semiconductor Discovery of the p-n Junction Roadblocks The Great
Breakthrough The Roll-Out . . . . . . And the Fight Shockley's Last Laugh
The Zeal of Teal and the Élan of Pfann Resolution 14 Launching the
Electronics Industry Sharing Technology New Players The Debut of Silicon
The Transistor Radio Japanese Pioneers The Transistor Era Begins 15 The
Dawn of Silicon Valley Wall Street Journal or Physical Review? Shockley and
the Traitorous Eight The Birth of Venture Capital The Changing of the Guard
16 The Integrated Circuit and the Chip Kilby and the First Integrated
Circuit Hoerni and the Planar Process Noyce and the Chip Fairchild and the
Silicon Valley Phenomenon 17 Chip Technology Blossoms The Early Market for
Chips Moore's Law Memory Chips Microprocessor-ENIAC on a chip The Personal
Computer Unleashed Ubiquitous Silicon 18 Evolution of the Electronics
Industry Competitors from Asia Computer-Aided Design The Foundries of
Taiwan Noyce, Moore, and Grove Turning Silicon Into Gold 19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal Displays Luminescent Semiconductors
Semiconductor Lasers Fiber Optic Communications Liquid Crystal Displays 20
The Information Age and Beyond Putting It All Together The Information
Revolution Globalization Looking Ahead Appendix I: Further Reading Appendix
II: Summary of Key "Conquerors of the Electron"