Manufacturing Books
Related Subjects: Discrete Automation Process Asset Management Regulatory Compliance Supply Chain Management Design and Materials Management
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All that and lessReview Date: 2004-09-14
Not just for researchersReview Date: 2000-06-14
I know of no other reference that manages to pack so much useful information into so few pages. And yet, it remains easy and enjoyable to read. Part of this may be due to the abundant drawings which have a certain charm of their own -- echoing the style of the famous C.S. Stong illustrations in the "Amateur Scientist" section of Scientific American.
This book is so good that I own two copies: one for my office at work and the second for reference at home.
AwesomeReview Date: 2001-07-19
If you have to work with any type of laboratory equipment you would be insane to NOT have this book on your shelf.
A Sometimes Handy BookReview Date: 2001-08-14
It would be good to see it updated every 5 years or so. I see the pub date is 1991. Things have changed a bit. It has a very good list of references, but with the advent of the web, it would be good to see some the reference material cite the web.
You cannot work in my lab unless you've read this!Review Date: 2001-08-10

Used price: $12.62

Almost the best you can getReview Date: 2008-07-31
Great for starters and long time collecors.
Charlie Mack Matchbox BookReview Date: 2008-05-11
One of the best books on Matchbox Toys.Review Date: 2005-09-06
Great Matchbox reference book !!!Review Date: 2000-09-15
1st Edition is BetterReview Date: 2008-02-16

the most gut-wrenching historical account I've ever readReview Date: 2008-01-11
Just several years ago I met a woman whose entire family - her husband and all her children - died under the Khmer Rouge monsters.
Amazingly, after the stories Miss Szymusiak recounts: of the young girl who was killed for being too pretty, of those murdered for daring to exhibit signs of affection for one another, and of unspeakable tortures inflicted upon absolutely helpless and innocent people of all ages, the chapter which really drained my blood was the one detailing her witnessing the beginning of the purge. The author notes the young Communist cadres being themselves called in for interrogation and torture and disappearing one by one.
This is a chilling account of the darkest period in 20th Century history.
A child's account of her family's struggle to survive.Review Date: 2000-06-08
Treated worse than dogsReview Date: 2005-07-05
The latter and his cronies turned a whole country into a concentration camp guided by the iron fist of a centrally planned economy which was based on rice production quotas.
Starvation and killing of whole families including babies were part of normal daily life. The author herself lost nearly all her family.
The slogan was 'be deaf and dump if you want to survive'.
Exceptionally, this book also relates the disturbing facts which happened in a Red Khmer camp in Thailand until one year after Pol Pot's defeat by the Vietnamese.
Molyda Szymusiak tells only the facts. She doesn't explain the overall picture of Pol Pot's regime, politically, socially, economically or internationally.
Therefore I highly recommend the eminent works of David Chandler as well as Philip Short's magisterial biography of Pol Pot (Saloth Sar).
This book shows painfully the disastrous consequences of a power grasp by ideological fanatics who created a one party state bureaucracy which wielded total uncontrolled power over the population.
This regime was a terrible shame for the left.
A very disturbing read.
Chilling and movingReview Date: 2004-01-17
A sobering look at man's inhumanity to man.Review Date: 2000-03-26
Having read "First they killed my father" by Loung Ung It would be difficult for me to review this book with out comparing it to Loung Ung's memoir.
Both are essentially the same story, a young upper middle class girl living in Phnom Phen in april of 1975 when thier life, family and happiness are torn from them by the khmer rouge.
Many of thier experinces are similar as you might expect (long hours in forced labor, family deaths, witnessing murder ect..) but each has a unique story of thier own.
The writing styles also vary greatly and this is where Loung's "First they killed my Father is the better" book. Molyda tells her story in a very straight foward manner. Her discriptions of murder, torture and rotting corpses are alomost clinical in tone as if she is afaid to visit or express her real feelings at the time (and who could realy blame her) we are giving only hints about her family and life before April 17th 1975 (to be fair this may be in part to spare distant family members still in Cambodia from retalation)
In Loung's book however we are treated to two light hearted chapters discribing her life in Phnom Pehn before April 17th 1975 this gives the reader a chance to feel they realy know her, her brother's, sisters and parents thier strengths and weakness'.
Loung's memoir is far more emotional in tone and feeling leaving the reader almost gasping for air at points.
For those overly squimish that makes "The Stones Cry Out" the better of the two books. It is also the better of the two books if your sole interest is the surrounding history of the killing fields.
But for those just wishing to read a great emotional book "first They killed My father" is the better choice but I would highly recomend both to all.

If you read only one outdated flash memory-related press release this year...Review Date: 2008-03-24
What an exciting read!Review Date: 2007-09-05
Paragraph 13 is exceptionally good.
must buy!Review Date: 2007-09-04
Absoluting enthralling with an ending that will leave you wanting moreReview Date: 2007-09-07
512MB memory sticks bring back memories of my childhood when we would go down to the store, buy some memory sticks and plug them into a computer. We would transfer files between computers with them. Oh what fun we had! This press release certainly brings back fond memories.
It also stirs your thoughts with its deep moral messages. You will ponder it deeply.
Truly at the level of Tolkien or Chesterton. Its wit, wisdom, and logic strikes to the very core of man.
The ending is left deliberately open for a sequel. How long will we have to wait? It's been four years! As soon as we know about a sequel I am pre-ordering it.
EnthrallingReview Date: 2007-09-06

Dated but Critical TextReview Date: 2006-03-14
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30 Years and still one of the best booksReview Date: 2004-11-22
great book!Review Date: 2004-05-06
explained everything in right content and language....simple
and easy...just amazing!
Excellent guide to the practicing engineer.Review Date: 1999-08-04
Classical book for Process heat transferReview Date: 2002-01-28

Used price: $4.05

A review of Watches Tell More Than TimeReview Date: 2003-03-04
He is a true gentleman who has always been willing to chat with me and help me to understand why I really liked a cetain car I was reviewing.
Del's book not only provides brief and clear analysis of why objects around us are made the way they are, but gave me a far more complete tool set with which to judge. What I learned will allow me to be a better writer who can now "make sense" out of what I am feeling.
I have not only told my friends about the book, I went out and purchased about a dozen and sent them to fellow writers and editors. And being the cheapskate that I am, this even surprised me.
This is simply a superb book and will be cherished by anyone who really wants to understand how Industrial Design developed
and grew into something that touches us every second of every day
whether we recognize it or not.
A review of Watches Tell More Than TimeReview Date: 2003-03-04
He is a true gentleman who has always been willing to chat with me and help me to understand why I really liked a cetain car I was reviewing.
Del's book not only provides brief and clear analysis of why objects around us are made the way they are, but gave me a far more complete tool set with which to judge. What I learned will allow me to be a better writer who can now "make sense" out of what I am feeling.
I have not only told my friends about the book, I went out and purchased about a dozen and sent them to fellow writers and editors. And being the cheapskate that I am, this even surprised me.
This is simply a superb book and will be cherished by anyone who really wants to understand how Industrial Design developed
and grew into something that touches us every second of every day whether we recognize it or not.
one of a kindReview Date: 2003-02-18
Excellent content that needs some condensingReview Date: 2002-12-10
It explains these responses in terms of evolutionary psychology. And, in what I consider to be the reason to read the book, it tells you how to measure and optimize them. That is, it lays out the theoretical underpinnings for a small set of attributes (contrast, novelty, objective concinnity, and subjective concinnity) that are fundamentally responsible for our emotional responses to objects, then describes a systematic process by which you can strengthen the responses that you consider important for a given product, and then measure your success (using a semantic differential scale) and find out you whether you have simultaneously weakened other desirable responses.
There is some jargon, but it's well defined and to the point, and anyone interested in design should have no problem understanding it.
It's at its best when the author delves into specific examples. Many are from his experience in the car design field; others are everyday items that everyone can relate to. The detailed deconstruction of a "simple" Corelle cup is outstanding -- I wish the book had a dozen more like it.
The book's major weakness is the amount of time devoted to relatively elementary concepts, such as contrast and novelty. (How many times and in how many ways do we need to be told, for example, that new things command more of our attention than familiar ones?) I finished several chapters in a row thinking "OK, now that's he's got that out of his system, he's about to get to the good stuff." Eventually he does, but the repetition beforehand is why my rating is four stars, not five.
Note: The book is _not_ about what I might call the "mechanics of aesthetics". How is it that Curve A feels dull while Curve B -- a subtle, almost unnoticeable variation -- seems taut and alive? Why does this union of materials and forms seem exactly right, even inspiring, but that one fails to catch the eye?
For example, the author calls SUVs outwardly "robust", "rugged", and "militaristic". That feels right, but what makes it so? What is it, exactly, about the shapes and lines of an SUV that evoke such a different reaction than is typical for a minivan ("bland", "boring", "utilitarian")? Each is, after all, more like the other than like a sedan. Yet no one would have trouble identifying the type from a picture -- even without telltale backgrounds of the Rockies vs a youth soccer field. Each time I think I've got it nailed down, I see a counter-example on the road. I think it's mostly a matter of the angle between the hood and windshield, and the height of the grille. But that just begs the question: why are the more acute angle and higher grille more aggressive in the first place? A lower grille and gentler angle are considered more aggressive in a sports car.
"Watches Tell More than Time" tantalizingly dances around such questions, but fundamentally doesn't attempt to answer them. But it leaves you better equipped to wrestle with the answers yourself. (A sports car has different emotional goals than an SUV.)
So the book won't make you an industrial designer any more than a trip to the art supply store will make you an artist. Instead, it introduces you to a fundamental chunk of an industrial designer's toolkit. If you've already internalized "talk to your users" and "keep it simple", and you want a deeper understanding of how some products are able to become beloved icons, you'll probably find very interesting material here.
What it takes to have a Wow product!Review Date: 2003-01-01
The author describes from a neurological and pyschological point of view how you react to a new product the instant you see it. I am talking micro-seconds here. Then, he discusses how you come to like it or reject it (a few microseconds later). This was truly interesting. He relates it back to Information Theory -- yet the book was not about bits and bytes. He describes how various shapes communicate differing amounts of information. Too much results in an over load.
The author presents a simple model to analyze products. To help with this he discusses how he uses semantic difference surveys. I found this material very interesting although I wish that he had included samples of the survey documents. I didn't understand how the prospects visualized and then specified the ideal product to compare your product to.
This is truly a great book but it does requires you to slow down when you read. The author carefully defines his terms - which unfortunately have to deal with cultural abstractions (like 'zeitgeists', 'daimons'). To keep up with the author, you need to understand these terms, as the author defines them.
I will now go back a second time and try to make his framework more permanent in my brain.
The author sleeps and dreams about great design. He has been a great designer (cars) for some time and now teaches out in San Jose.
If you develop new products, or are a CEO of a company, or if you just like design... this is a required book.
I looked at the book at the book store several times and put it back because the abstract terminology turned me off. Later I went and sat down in the book store and read it more slowly. It was then that I realized what a jewell this book is. I'd love to sit in on one of his classes.
John Dunbar
Sugar Land, TX


Great Book on Bourbon and Beam's Influence on ItReview Date: 2007-11-01
An American product by an American FamilyReview Date: 2003-11-19
Reads like a novelReview Date: 2003-09-22
Fascinating history, wonderfully writtenReview Date: 2004-03-17
Whether It's History or Business You're After, Great ReadReview Date: 2003-09-29
As the story of a facinating family, the author gently takes you through the many generations of the Beams without getting you lost in a morass of detail. You remain excited waiting for the next turn in their fortunes, and you get a wonderful look at the many personalities involved in building the Bourbon industry over time in the process.
When I think about the book from a business standpoint, Paul Pacult succeeded in conveying the patience and the passion these people have for their product, and how they manage to maintain that passion, literally over generations. In a world of managing quarter to quarter, the Beams are a refreshing change.
A very-well written, facinating look at a piece of Americana. I heartily recommend it.

Used price: $29.75

Bakelite Bangle: Price & Identification GuideReview Date: 2005-09-15
great bakelite bangle guideReview Date: 2001-08-23
The Best Bakelite Book YetReview Date: 1999-11-29
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO GREAT VINTAGE PLASTICS!Review Date: 2004-07-12
First thing you will do is eat up all the eye candy this nice large and attractive volume has to offer, and after you finish drooling and wishing, you can read all about the different types of plastics, their history, chronology, and how they differ. Ways to identify the difference between Bakelite, Celluloid, Lucite and how to spot newly worked "fakelite" as well. The author is very knowledgeable and is also willing to share her knowledge with other collectors of this engrossing hobby. I look through this book so often, and find myself reading a different section each time, and sometimes just admiring all the wonderful shots of some of the most gorgeous coveted pieces in the bakelite realm. Karima also shows a nice section on lucites as well as celluloid, so you can get a good idea of these pieces when you might be lucky enough to find one, or consider buying.
I have had the personal pleasure of talking to this author, and she is a wonderful insightful person who took the time to answer all my questions and share her knowledge with me, and I am that much wiser for that, and buying her book. I currently have 3 plastic jewelry references, and hers is by far the best.
For anyone interested in collecting bakelite bangles, other vintage plastics, and gaining a nice working knowledge of them as well as a chance to see the most gorgeous pieces as examples, this book is indispensible. The only thing I would change is the price guide, since it is unfortunately hard to use this to price. I would like to see the dimensions and all the other pertinent information, on the page with the items and not in appendix form at the back. Otherwise, I highly recommend it as a must have for your bakelite reference library.
A must for all bakelite lovers!Review Date: 2000-02-27


Chemical/Process EngineerReview Date: 2006-06-30
A well written bookReview Date: 2007-11-28
From an Industrial Practitioner of Process Measurement & ControlReview Date: 2006-07-09
I have found this book to be an ideal self-study guide. In this Edition the authors have included several categories of problems sets to assist in self-study. Self-assessment tests with answers (in Appendix A) follow each section, and thought and discussion problems follow the self-assessment tests.
If a non Chemical Engineer can learn Chemical Engineering Principles from this book, I guarantee that any Chemical Engineering student or practitioner will find this readable textbook very useful.
Great TextbookReview Date: 2008-02-24
In all, this is an excellent book for an introduction to Chemical Engineering or, as I use it now, as a great reference. I've had to retire my first copy and am using a new version. One bit of advice: get good copies of large and small psychrometry charts: 10-110 F dry bulb (small chart); 10-260+ (large chart).Put these in an envelope in the flap of the book for quick access.
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A winner text!Review Date: 2004-07-29
And after you bought it you will wonder in silent voice of course ( Do we need a teacher for Chemical Engineering Principles? ) .
If you acquire this one and then the Whitwell and Tonner (see my review) , How can you lose ?
Fundamental for Chemical , Production and Industrial Engineering.

Used price: $27.97

An invaluable, complete reference guide for collectors.Review Date: 2000-05-04
A Must-Have for Boomers Reclaiming Their Childhood!Review Date: 2000-04-30
Very entertaining and educationalReview Date: 2000-04-29
Fun even for the Non CollectorReview Date: 2003-08-23
The book is so colorful and beautifully laid out. The woman has a sense of humor about the bizarre items of the past, some of which would never pass today like the doll Flatsy. Another item of this book was Growing Hair Cher where a person could make Cher's hair go up and down with a key.
I've shown this to other people and it always manages to get a couple of laughs.
Great Information Source on Dolls of the 60s and 70s!Review Date: 2002-02-17
Related Subjects: Discrete Automation Process Asset Management Regulatory Compliance Supply Chain Management Design and Materials Management
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The physics covered is accurate and usable, and the references, clear presentations of topics, and lists of suppliers make this book essential for any serious experimental scientist to be.
Buy it! :)