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Reminds me of Field, an art installation of planted fluorescent tubes under an HV electricity distribution line back in 2004: https://www.gorge.org/images/field/

Ah yes, and they are very readable indeed.

Felder & Felder's Modern Physics is pretty good (https://www.cambridge.org/gb/universitypress/subjects/physic...). I also second OgsyedIE's suggestion og Young & Freedman.

The Felder & Felder book looks really good and doesn't seem as mathematical as Walecka i.e. more expository. Looking at the ToC/Sample the chapters have a good progression and are nicely setup.

The print copy however seems prohibitively expensive :-(


The print copy of Felder and Felder looks to be cheaper than Young and Freedman at both Barnes and Noble and Amazon?

I am based in India, so Amazon.in has a low-price Indian edition of Young & Freedman while Felder & Felder is the original US edition which is quite expensive.

I have decided to get all (the seven i have listed in my post above) of John Dirk Walecka's books since low-price editions are available and they seem quite rigorous with enough depth to boot. Pairing it with some other easier text (perhaps Young & Freedman) would cover my bases nicely.


I did learn German at school but it didn't help much when trying to get to Munich airport last year. I could understand what was going on with the cancelled trains at the station I boarded at, but the train I did catch end up tipping us all out after a few stops.

I could make out a bit of what the driver said, but not enough to be sure of the detail, which is what really mattered. I expected to miss my flight, but just made it in the end.


Sounds like a PLD might suit your usecase? Simpler than an FPGA, programmed like an EEPROM, perfect for glue logic.


I wish CPLDs were more well known in the common vernacular.

The industry draws a distinction between CPLDs and FPGAs, and rightly so, but most "Arduino-level" hobbyists think "I want something I can program so that it acts like such-and-such a circuit, I know, I need an FPGA!" when what they probably want is what the professional world would call a CPLD - and the distinction in terminology between the two does more to confuse than to clarify.

I don't know how to fix this; it'd be lovely if the two followed convergent paths, with FPGAs gaining on-board storage and the line between them blurring. Or maybe we need a common term that encompasses both. ("Programmable logic device" is technically that, but no-one knows that.)

Anyway. CPLDs are neat.


I don’t see how CPLDs solve anything?

You write RTL for them just like you do for FPGAs, you need to configure them as well. The only major benefit is that they don’t have a delay between power up and logic active? But that’s not something that would make a difference for most people.

CPLDs are also a dying breed and being replaced with FPGAs that have parallel on-board flash to allow fast configuration after power up. (e.g. MAX10)


I don’t know anything about this (other than doing mediocre in some undergrad Verilog classes one million years ago). Wikipedia seems to call FPGAs a type of PLD. Of course, everybody has heard of FPGAs; is it right to think they’ve sort of branched off, become their own thing, and eclipsed their superset?


"Programmed like an EEPROM" is part of the problem, any system that needs more than one piece of firmware to be wrangled during the assembly/bringup process is asking for pain.

But, really, no one cares what's inside the box. CPLD or FPGA, they're all about the same. The available PLDs are still not really acceptable. There's a bunch of 5V dinosaurs that the manufacturers would obviously love to axe, and a few tiny little micro-BGA things where you've got to be buying 100k to even submit a documentation bug report. Not much for stuff in the middle.


Memories. I wrote the initial Windows Media Player plugin for Audioscrobbler but didn't maintain it.


Tim Hunkin had a wonderful series on TV back in the 80s or 90s - the Secret Life of Machines. Nice relaxed pace and great for kids. The episodes are up on YouTube via his website: https://timhunkin.com/a243_Secret-Life-of-Machines-intro.htm


What a creative fellow. The illustrations on those shows are great.


Yes, it's routinely done. The NHS has this to say: https://www.nhs.uk/pregnancy/labour-and-birth/where-to-give-...


Probably a side effect of NHS England being abolished?


They also don't dip in anticipation of a car coming round the corner, which humans can do fairly accurately.


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