bdn2004
Electrical
- Jan 27, 2007
- 799
This is a point and question. I find it beneficial and fascinating to track the history of electrical engineering and read about the people who made the initial discoveries. I don't think these people get the credit they deserve.
Here's a case in point...I tried recently to get at the library a book entitled "The Man Who Changed Everything". Think about that title for a minute. The man? James Maxwell. No book store carried it either. I asked a number of people had they ever heard of him. A universal No was the answer, about "the man who changed everything". What a disgrace really.
I know this may not be the proper forum, but if not here, where? I recently read "The Electric Life of Michael Faraday" - excellent.
If anyone else likes to read such books please recommend.
Here's a case in point...I tried recently to get at the library a book entitled "The Man Who Changed Everything". Think about that title for a minute. The man? James Maxwell. No book store carried it either. I asked a number of people had they ever heard of him. A universal No was the answer, about "the man who changed everything". What a disgrace really.
I know this may not be the proper forum, but if not here, where? I recently read "The Electric Life of Michael Faraday" - excellent.
If anyone else likes to read such books please recommend.