I always found the ARRL Handbooks to be great refreshers for electronic theory. Although the intended audience is obviously the amateur radio community, these books are a great resource for anyone interested in electronics. Save some money and don't buy the latest greatest edition.
> No, but neither were they called terrorists. The term wasn't much in use before 9/11. Before that such people were quite properly called "criminals".
I'm really sick of this "before 9/11" blah blah blah never happened garbage. Short term memory loss caused by media saturation? Don't they teach anything in History these days?
I always found the ARRL Handbooks to be great refreshers for electronic theory. Although the intended audience is obviously the amateur radio community, these books are a great resource for anyone interested in electronics. Save some money and don't buy the latest greatest edition.
ARRL Handbook
> No, but neither were they called terrorists. The term wasn't much in use before 9/11. Before that such people were quite properly called "criminals".
n _terrorist_incidents
FYI: the word "terrorist" was in general use by the late 1790s. Here is a rather long list of anti-American terrorist incidents that goes back to 1812. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_anti-America
I'm really sick of this "before 9/11" blah blah blah never happened garbage. Short term memory loss caused by media saturation? Don't they teach anything in History these days?