On Mar 20, 2010, at 9:01 AM, Tim Shoppa wrote:
I appreciate the old databooks very much... but with
bound books
keeping them open on the bench to the page you want was always a
problem.
Anything without a good binding fell apart 30 years ago. Even the ones
that are well bound (e.g. the hardback TTL books from TI) don't last
forever although they were printed by the millions and are still
readily
found.
What I actually like, is having a big 23" or bigger screen at the
bench
with web access to the datasheets. That's pretty decent. I can zoom
the
pinout big enough that I can read it from the other side of the bench,
or I can open the pinout and the state table simultaneously in two
windows. Pretty good, at least as long as I have my glasses on.
But the screen still isn't as good as having the datasheet right there
on the bench (flat on the bench) a foot or less away from the circuit.
I wonder how a Kindle will do on the bench? Anyone drop their
soldering iron
on a screen yet? The good pages in the databooks always had solder
or food or both on them, that made the good pages easier to find!
I've thought about that sort of thing for the bench. But just
having a terminal there (actually just nearby) solves most of the
problem. For something that I want ON the bench, I print the
relevant pages of the PDF. Paper is cheap, toner is cheap.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
Port Charlotte, FL