Resistor Color Codes for Babies


Book Description

Plant the seeds of electrical engineering in your baby's mind with these compelling, high-contrast images and memorable nursery rhymes about the color code used to mark electrical resistors. Babies' young minds and eyes are captivated by ten bold, vivid, and engaging high-contrast images that show each digit zero through nine in the corresponding color with a related abstract shape. Toddlers can use the images in the book to begin to familiarize themselves with numbers and colors, while at the same time forming the number-color associations of the resistor color code. For older children, a unique nursery rhyme to go along with each image will further reinforce the association, while at the same time developing language and memory skills.




Resistor Color Codes for Babies


Book Description

Plant the seeds of electrical engineering in your baby's mind with these compelling, high-contrast images and memorable nursery rhymes about the color code used to mark electrical resistors.Babies' young minds and eyes are captivated by ten bold, vivid, and engaging high-contrast images that show each digit zero through nine in the corresponding color with a related abstract shape.Toddlers can use the images in the book to begin to familiarize themselves with numbers and colors, while at the same time forming the number-color associations of the resistor color code.For older children, a unique nursery rhyme to go along with each image will further reinforce the association, while at the same time developing language and memory skills.




Baby Blackhat Resistor Color Bands


Book Description

Baby Blackhat Resistor Color Bands is the fourth book in the book series Baby Blackhat which is a book series teaching computer science and electronics topics to kids. Baby Blackhat Resistor Color Bands teaches you a good way to memorize the color bands of electronic resistor components with a short story. There are also practice examples of using this method.




Resistor & Color Codes


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Resistor Color Code


Book Description




Electronics for Kids


Book Description

Why do the lights in a house turn on when you flip a switch? How does a remote-controlled car move? And what makes lights on TVs and microwaves blink? The technology around you may seem like magic, but most of it wouldn’t run without electricity. Electronics for Kids demystifies electricity with a collection of awesome hands-on projects. In Part 1, you’ll learn how current, voltage, and circuits work by making a battery out of a lemon, turning a metal bolt into an electromagnet, and transforming a paper cup and some magnets into a spinning motor. In Part 2, you’ll make even more cool stuff as you: –Solder a blinking LED circuit with resistors, capacitors, and relays –Turn a circuit into a touch sensor using your finger as a resistor –Build an alarm clock triggered by the sunrise –Create a musical instrument that makes sci-fi soundsThen, in Part 3, you’ll learn about digital electronics—things like logic gates and memory circuits—as you make a secret code checker and an electronic coin flipper. Finally, you’ll use everything you’ve learned to make the LED Reaction Game—test your reaction time as you try to catch a blinking light!With its clear explanations and assortment of hands-on projects, Electronics for Kids will have you building your own circuits in no time.




On Raising a Digital Human


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The Visual Nature of Color


Book Description

In this important scholarly study, Patricia Sloane surveys the history of theories about color and challenges readers--students and instructors of art and art history, artists and designers, and those concerned with color in other fields such as science, philosophy, and industry--to rethink their beliefs about color from the simplest level. Suggesting that the ways in which color has been viewed since the nineteenth century are, at best, inomplete, she discusses Color and Language, Color and Light, Color and Form, Color and Culture, Color and Theory. Sloane asks: are the concepts of primary, secondary, and tertiary colors significant? Are color harmony and complementarity meaningful notions? How is our perception of color limited by the words we use to describe it? What is the relationship between color and light? Between color and form? Between color and vision? --book jacket.




Approaches to Teaching Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 and Other Works


Book Description

As teachers well know, the elements that make Thomas Pynchon exciting to read and study—the historical references, the multilayered prose, and the postmodern integration of high and low cultures and science and literature—often constitute hurdles to undergraduate and graduate readers alike. The essays gathered in this volume turn these classroom challenges into assets, showing instructors how to make the narratives' frustration of reader expectations not only intellectually rewarding but also part of the joy of reading The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow, Mason & Dixon, and other Pynchon works, short and long. Like all volumes in the Approaches to Teaching series, the collection opens with a survey of original and supplementary materials. The essays that follow offer an array of classroom techniques: among them, ways to contextualize the novels in their historical settings, from Puritan America through World War II and the volatile 1960s; to use the texts to explore racial and gender politics and legacies of colonialism; and to make Pynchon's elaborate prose style accessible to students. Teachers will also find sample syllabi for courses solely on Pynchon as well as suggestions for incorporating his work into graduate and undergraduate classrooms at a range of institutions.




Popular Science


Book Description

Popular Science gives our readers the information and tools to improve their technology and their world. The core belief that Popular Science and our readers share: The future is going to be better, and science and technology are the driving forces that will help make it better.