Computer Integrated Machine Design

| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.24 (833 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0024283908 |
| Format Type | : | paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 646 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2013-12-04 |
| Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
About the Author National bestselling author Charles Wilson has become known for edge-of-your-seat tension and fast-paced action in his novels. Other Wilson novels are "Game Plan," "Fertile Ground" and "Embryo"; three suspense novels, "When First We Deceive," "Silent Witness" and "The Cassandra Prophecy"; and coming soon in hardcover, "Deep Sleep"-- a psychological thriller set in a Voodoo-influenced swampy parish in South Louisiana. Charles Wilson currently lives with his wife and three children in Brandon, Mississippi, where he is at work on his next novel.. His first work, "Nightwatcher," a psychological thriller, was called "splendid" by John Grisham and "quite an achievement" by the "Los Angeles Times," Ed Gorman, publisher of "Mystery Scene" magazine says, "Wilson might flat-out be the best plotter of our generation." Wilson's "Direct Descendant" and "Extinct," novels exploring the chilling consequences of so-called scientific advances, have been
Computer Integrated Machine Design A Customer Mr. Wilson has a lot of nerve calling his book computer integrated. He offers a couple of flowcharts and mentions a couple of symbolic mathematics programs by name once and then calls his book computer integrated. There are no color graphics in the book and in fact very few graphics at all. His derivitation of formulae are mediocre. There are a lot better books for the money on the market.
Emphasis is placed on evaluation and interpretation of results, and development of design skills.. This book is designed to take advantage of the almost universal availability of personal computers. Utilizing computer-aided design methods, this book allows readers to optimize a design with a few key strokes; to ask “what if?” ; to examine alternatives; and to plot and interpret the effect of design changes
His first work, "Nightwatcher," a psychological thriller, was called "splendid" by John Grisham and "quite an achievement" by the "Los Angeles Times," Ed Gorman, publisher of "Mystery Scene" magazine says, "Wilson might flat-out be the best plotter of our generation." Wilson's "Direct Descendant" and "Extinct," novels exploring the chilling conseq
