Hardcover. Condition: Fair. No Jacket. Readable copy. Pages may have considerable notes/highlighting. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Language: English
Published by London, New York, Sydney: John Wiley, 1967
Seller: Antiquariat Thomas Haker GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin, Germany
Association Member: GIAQ
Softcover. Condition: Gut. 331 p. Good. Cover shows mild wear. Clean pages. Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 520.
Unknown. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Missing dust jacket; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.
Published by John Wiley and Sons, 1967
Seller: Crappy Old Books, Barry, United Kingdom
Paperback. Condition: Good. Long before YouTube tutorials and Arduino kits, there was Introduction to Electronics (1967) by Paul E. Gray?a sturdy, no-nonsense textbook that tried to explain the mysteries of electrons to generations of wide-eyed students who thought plugging things into wall sockets was a reasonable first experiment. This is electronics in its purest 1960s form: transistors were cutting-edge, integrated circuits were fresh on the scene, and Gray was there to walk you through it all with chalkboard clarity and just enough sternness to keep you from accidentally blowing up your desk lamp. This John Wiley and Sons edition doesn?t mess around: expect diagrams that look like they were drawn with the steadiest ruler in Massachusetts, examples that veer from charmingly simple to brain-squeezingly dense, and the occasional whiff of optimism that technology was going to save us all (spoiler: it mostly gave us better stereos and eventually the internet). Our copy is in Good condition. Which means: the cover has survived a few decades of lab benches, dorm rooms, and perhaps the odd coffee spill, but the pages remain intact, the diagrams still sharp, and the binding sturdy enough to withstand being propped open next to a soldering iron. It?s got the kind of gentle wear that makes you feel like you?re joining a secret lineage of tinkerers and engineers. At Crappy Old Books, we love titles like this because they carry an aura of both nostalgia and authority. Sure, the world has moved on to microchips the size of dust motes, but Gray?s explanations of resistors, capacitors, and transistors are still a rite of passage. This isn?t just a book?it?s a time machine to an era when ?electronics? meant big ideas, big dreams, and sometimes very big, humming machines. So if you?ve ever wanted to peek behind the curtain of how your gadgets actually work?or just want to decorate your shelf with something that makes you look like the sort of person who can repair a radio in the dark? Introduction to Electronics is your trusty companion.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, 1967
Seller: 3 R's Used Books/Hannelore Headley Old &, Port Robinson, ON, Canada
Soft Cover. Condition: Very Good-. No Jacket. 2 By Number Line. Bright blue cover with black title, white author. Colour has worn down around edges in a very thin band. 2 diagonal creases on upper right front corner. 2 long vertical creases on spine. Light foxing on inner cover. Very light grey inked number stamp on half title page. Text is immaculate! Any picture found beside this listing may NOT actually be a picture of this book but a stock photo used by the listing site. 3 R's Used Books and Hannelore Headley Old & Fine Books, Inc. are committed to saving the trees one leaf at a time.