Don’t bother with this. It’s half finished SEO fodder, and while most of it is pretty good, it’s probably never going to get done due to competing incentives (i.e. running a business) on the owners’ time.<p>Spend $125 on Horowitz and Hill’s <i>The Art of Electronics, 3rd Edition</i>. It’s the last electronics text you’ll ever need.
Am I so old that I'm the only one that remembers the Forrest M Mims books that you could pick up at Radio Shack? He really did a great job of making some of this understandable without getting into complex math.<p><a href="https://hackaday.com/2017/01/18/forrest-mims-radio-shack-and-the-notebooks-that-launched-a-thousand-careers/" rel="nofollow">https://hackaday.com/2017/01/18/forrest-mims-radio-shack-and...</a><p>Example: <a href="http://www.zpag.net/Electroniques/Kit/Getting_Started_in_Electronics_-_3ed_-_[Forrest_M.Mims].pdf" rel="nofollow">http://www.zpag.net/Electroniques/Kit/Getting_Started_in_Ele...</a>
"Ultimate Electronics" author here -- waking up and seeing this on HN this morning!<p>Reading the comments here, it seems like the summary of feedback is simply "please write more sections". It's true that I haven't had much time to devote to this project lately due to other work commitments, my apologies.<p>Adding any new section involves three major intertwined components:<p>1. the conceptual explanatory text,<p>2. the equations and algebraically-solved examples, and<p>3. the schematics and interactive simulations.<p>Right now my focus is on building out all three (probably roughly equal in time demand) and I am wondering if that is a style that is working? Any other feedback on the content or style itself? Thanks -- your feedback is encouraging :)
Nice site and explanations, I think there would be value in adding a few more analogies / examples where it gets math heavy - my brain borks at some of the equations as while I'm good with logic - I'm pretty terrible with math - but maybe it is simply required understanding.<p>Also - a way to download it as a epub and / or PDF would be excellent.
I am thinking about recreating the Oberheim SEM module based on the available schematics. This resource, along with the Art of Electronics, appears very helpful.