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Lucky strikes again / Robert W. Lucky.

By: Lucky, R. W [author.].
Contributor(s): John Wiley & Sons [publisher.] | IEEE Xplore (Online service) [distributor.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, c1993Distributor: [Piscataqay, New Jersey] : IEEE Xplore, [1993]Description: 1 PDF (xv, 278 pages).Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780470545164; 047054516X.Subject(s): Electrical engineering | Artificial neural networks | Business | Cathode ray tubes | Computers | Continuous wavelet transforms | Costs | Debugging | Electrical engineering education | Electronic publishing | Engineering profession | Fires | Fuses | Games | Gears | HDTV | Heating | Information management | Information resources | Information retrieval | Junctions | Lead | Materials | Phantoms | Postal services | Project management | Research and development | Scientific publishing | Software | Switches | TV | Technology social factors | Terminology | Transistors | Virtual environment | Visualization | WritingGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleDDC classification: 621.3 Online resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
Foreword. -- Preface. -- Part 1 About Engineers. -- The Joy of Engineering. -- The Image Gap. -- The High-Tech Appeal. -- Celebrities as Engineers. -- Layers of Ability. -- Engineers: Dearth or Glut? -- The Best and the Brightest. -- Engineers: Born or Made? -- The Curriculum Dilemma. -- Giving Away the Store. -- Part 2 So What If Engineers Can't Talk or Write? -- The Gong Show. -- Feedback. -- The Banquet Speech. -- Sliding By. -- Not Ready for Prime Time. -- Credentials: Who Needs Them? -- A Way with Words. -- The Papermill. -- Part 3 The Fickleness of Technology. -- Rampant Technology. -- The Incredible Shrinking Transistor. -- What's Real Anymore? -- An Engineer in the Land of Lilliput. -- Goodbye, Heathkit. -- The Electronic Hobbyist. -- The Paper Airplane. -- A (Very Modern) Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. -- Coping with Complexity. -- Software Productivity. -- What's Bugging Us? -- Plugging In. -- The Wisdom of the Net. -- The Gigabit Network: Who Needs It? -- Part 4 Playing the Corporate Game. -- The Bean Counters. -- Corporate Communication. -- Management Power. -- Toward Dynamic Demos. -- The Fashionable Thing. -- Leapfrog a Generation! -- Proprietary Information. -- Tahiti or O'Hare? -- Committees and Canines. -- Turf. -- That Dreaded NIH Syndrome. -- Finger Pointing. -- Part 5 Looking at Life. -- The Geniuses Among Us. -- Diminishing Dinosaurs. -- The Dreaded Test. -- The Footsteps of Giants. -- Faking It. -- The Frenzied Life. -- What's Going On? -- The Information Age. -- Part 6 Fantasies of the Future. -- Coding Is Dead. -- Computer Aid. -- The Information Filter. -- The Phone Surrogate. -- The Communications Millennium. -- The Friendly Interface. -- The Ambitious Word Processor. -- The Grand Challenge. -- Carwars. -- Telepresence. -- HDTV... and Then?
Summary: "Lucky's book...makes me laugh again and again..." --Bill Moyers, Public Affairs Television, Inc. Bob Lucky, author of the widely acclaimed "Reflections" column in Spectrum magazine, provides a humorous, nostalgic collection of ten years worth of his own reflections on typical situations engineers encounter during their careers. Spiced with 20% new anecdotes and personal experiences, LUCKY STRIKES...AGAIN takes good-natured gibes at corporate bureaucrats while offering some not-so-subtle advice on ways to circumvent the bureaucracy and gives the bureaucrats some hints on when to look the other way.
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Foreword. -- Preface. -- Part 1 About Engineers. -- The Joy of Engineering. -- The Image Gap. -- The High-Tech Appeal. -- Celebrities as Engineers. -- Layers of Ability. -- Engineers: Dearth or Glut? -- The Best and the Brightest. -- Engineers: Born or Made? -- The Curriculum Dilemma. -- Giving Away the Store. -- Part 2 So What If Engineers Can't Talk or Write? -- The Gong Show. -- Feedback. -- The Banquet Speech. -- Sliding By. -- Not Ready for Prime Time. -- Credentials: Who Needs Them? -- A Way with Words. -- The Papermill. -- Part 3 The Fickleness of Technology. -- Rampant Technology. -- The Incredible Shrinking Transistor. -- What's Real Anymore? -- An Engineer in the Land of Lilliput. -- Goodbye, Heathkit. -- The Electronic Hobbyist. -- The Paper Airplane. -- A (Very Modern) Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. -- Coping with Complexity. -- Software Productivity. -- What's Bugging Us? -- Plugging In. -- The Wisdom of the Net. -- The Gigabit Network: Who Needs It? -- Part 4 Playing the Corporate Game. -- The Bean Counters. -- Corporate Communication. -- Management Power. -- Toward Dynamic Demos. -- The Fashionable Thing. -- Leapfrog a Generation! -- Proprietary Information. -- Tahiti or O'Hare? -- Committees and Canines. -- Turf. -- That Dreaded NIH Syndrome. -- Finger Pointing. -- Part 5 Looking at Life. -- The Geniuses Among Us. -- Diminishing Dinosaurs. -- The Dreaded Test. -- The Footsteps of Giants. -- Faking It. -- The Frenzied Life. -- What's Going On? -- The Information Age. -- Part 6 Fantasies of the Future. -- Coding Is Dead. -- Computer Aid. -- The Information Filter. -- The Phone Surrogate. -- The Communications Millennium. -- The Friendly Interface. -- The Ambitious Word Processor. -- The Grand Challenge. -- Carwars. -- Telepresence. -- HDTV... and Then?

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"Lucky's book...makes me laugh again and again..." --Bill Moyers, Public Affairs Television, Inc. Bob Lucky, author of the widely acclaimed "Reflections" column in Spectrum magazine, provides a humorous, nostalgic collection of ten years worth of his own reflections on typical situations engineers encounter during their careers. Spiced with 20% new anecdotes and personal experiences, LUCKY STRIKES...AGAIN takes good-natured gibes at corporate bureaucrats while offering some not-so-subtle advice on ways to circumvent the bureaucracy and gives the bureaucrats some hints on when to look the other way.

Also available in print.

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Description based on PDF viewed 12/21/2015.

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