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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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The Seasons
James Thomson, James Robert Boyd
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R888
Discovery Miles 8 880
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Written for the practicing electronics professional, Tolerance
Analysis of Electronic Circuits Using MATHCAD offers a
comprehensive, step-by-step treatment of methods used to perform
analyses essential to the design process of circuit cards and
systems of cards, including: worst-case analysis, limits for
production testing, component stress analysis, determining if a
design meets specification limits, and manufacturing yield analysis
Using a practical approach that allows engineers and technicians to
put the techniques directly into practice, the author presents the
mathematical procedures used to determine performance limits. The
topics and techniques discussed include extreme value and
root-sum-square analysis using symmetric and asymmetric tolerance,
Monte Carlo analysis using normal and uniform distributions,
sensitivity formulas, tolerance analyses of opamp offsets, and
anomalies of high-Q ac circuits.
Written for the practicing electronics professional, Tolerance
Analysis of Electronic Circuits Using MATLAB offers a
comprehensive, step-by-step treatment of methods used to perform
analyses essential to the design process of circuit cards and
systems of cards, including: worst-case analysis, limits for
production testing, component stress analysis, determining if a
design meets specification limits, and manufacturing yield analysis
Using a practical approach that allows engineers and technicians to
put the techniques directly into practice, the author presents the
mathematical procedures used to determine performance limits. The
topics and techniques discussed include extreme value and
root-sum-square analysis using symmetric and asymmetric tolerance,
Monte Carlo analysis using normal and uniform distributions,
sensitivity formulas, tolerance analyses of opamp offsets, and
anomalies of high-Q ac circuits.
Tax planning can lead to considerable efficiencies, but few GPs
have been trained as businessmen. This book in "The Business Side
of General Practice" series, provides a guide to the regulations,
identifies the pitfalls and opportunities and shows how to maximize
the income retained by the practice. John Dean is known for his
writing on financial management in general practice and has also
written "Making Sense of Practice Finance" (Radcliff).
Written for the practicing electronics professional, Tolerance Analysis of Electronic Circuits Using MATHCADä offers a comprehensive, step-by-step treatment of methods used to perform analyses essential to the design process of circuit cards and systems of cards, including: · worst-case analysis, · limits for production testing, · component stress analysis, · determining if a design meets specification limits, and · manufacturing yield analysis Using a practical approach that allows engineers and technicians to put the techniques directly into practice, the author presents the mathematical procedures used to determine performance limits. The topics and techniques discussed include extreme value and root-sum-square analysis using symmetric and asymmetric tolerance, Monte Carlo analysis using normal and uniform distributions, sensitivity formulas, tolerance analyses of opamp offsets, and anomalies of high-Q ac circuits.
Written for the practicing electronics professional, Tolerance Analysis of Electronic Circuits Using MATLAB offers a comprehensive, step-by-step treatment of methods used to perform analyses essential to the design process of circuit cards and systems of cards, including: · worst-case analysis, · limits for production testing, · component stress analysis, · determining if a design meets specification limits, and · manufacturing yield analysis Using a practical approach that allows engineers and technicians to put the techniques directly into practice, the author presents the mathematical procedures used to determine performance limits. The topics and techniques discussed include extreme value and root-sum-square analysis using symmetric and asymmetric tolerance, Monte Carlo analysis using normal and uniform distributions, sensitivity formulas, tolerance analyses of opamp offsets, and anomalies of high-Q ac circuits.
More than ten million readers have enjoyed Robert Boyd Munger's
spiritually challenging meditation on Christian discipleship.
Imagining what it would be like to have Jesus come to the home of
our hearts, Munger moves room by room considering what Christ
desires for us. In the living room we prepare to meet Christ daily.
In the dining room we examine together what appetites should and
should not control us. We even explore the closets in our lives
that Christ can help us clean out.Munger's practical and profound
booklet (now revised and expanded) helps you give Christ control
over all of your life.
Sixteen-year-old Randy Watson isn't sure if the classmate he beat
to a pulp will survive. Afraid of the consequences, he runs away
from a town in northern British Columbia. Hitchhiking, he criss
crosses the prairies from Alberta to Manitoba, working at
back-breaking, menial jobs -- at a feed mill, a meat packing plant,
on constructions sites and on an oil rig. After years on the road,
he settles down in Vancouver and ends up in Oakalla Prison. After
serving his time, will schooling and a girlfriend help him break
out of this cycle? Or will drugs on the Downtown East Side, another
horrific crime and the courts, decide his fate?
What motives underlie the ways humans interact socially? Are these
the same for all societies? Are these part of our nature, or
influenced by our environments? Over the last decade, research in
experimental economics has emphatically falsified the textbook
representation of Homo economicus. Hundreds of experiments suggest
that people care not only about their own material payoffs, but
also about such things as fairness, equity, and reciprocity.
However, this research left fundamental questions unanswered: Are
such social preferences stable components of human nature, or are
they modulated by economic, social, and cultural environments?
Until now, experimental research could not address this question
because virtually all subjects had been university students.
Combining ethnographic and experimental approaches to fill this
gap, this book breaks new ground in reporting the results of a
large cross-cultural study aimed at determining the sources of
social (non-selfish) preferences that underlie the diversity of
human sociality. In this study, the same experiments carried out
with university students were performed in fifteen small-scale
societies exhibiting a wide variety of social, economic, and
cultural conditions. The results show that the variation in
behaviour is far greater than previously thought, and that the
differences between societies in market integration and the
importance of cooperation explain a substantial portion of this
variation, which individual-level economic and demographic
variables could not. The results also trace the extent to which
experimental play mirrors patterns of interaction found in everyday
life. The book includes a succinct but substantive introduction to
the use of game theory as an analytical tool, and to its use in the
social sciences for the rigorous testing of hypotheses about
fundamental aspects of social behaviour outside artificially
constructed laboratories. The editors also summarize the results of
the fifteen case studies in a suggestive chapter about the scope of
the project.
Over the past 25 years, Boyd and Richerson have become well-known
across a wide range of disciplines for their path-breaking work on
evolution and culture. This work collects twenty of the influential
but relatively inaccessible published articels that form the
backbone of this research. It could not be more timely given the
growing influence of evolutionary psychology. The papers - which
were published in a diverse set of journals and which are not
easily available - a conceptually linked and form a cohesive,
unified evolutionary account of human culture. Their
interdisciplinary research is based on two notions. First, that
culture is crucial for understanding human behavior: unlike other
organism, socially transmitted beliefs, attitudes and values
heavily influence our behavior. Secondly, culture is part of
biology: the capacity to acquire and transmit culture is a derived
component of human psychology, and the contents of culture are
deeply intertwined with our biology. Taking off from these two
assumptions, Boyd and Richerson's novel idea is that culture is a
pool of information, stored in the brains of a population, that
gets transmitted from one brain to another by social learning
processes. Among their conclusions: culture can account for both
our astounding ecological success as well as the maladaptations
that characterize much of human behavior. Interest in Boyd and
Richerson's work spans anthropology, psychology, economics,
philosophy, and political science, and has influenced work on
animal behavior, economics and game theory, memes, and even
archaeology.
This tremendously popular guide to caring for children's health in the primary care setting has been completely revised and updated for the new edition. It includes guidance on the implications of the Children Act and child protection, Health for All Children, screening in pregnancy, asthma management, and other recent changes in practice and in the law. This is the most reliable and up-to-date book available for the primary health care team.
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