On 30 December 2015 at 14:20, Bob Camp wrote:
> Hi
>
> Actually it looks like the party is over. At least from here in the US,
> when I go to
> the original links, they will only sell me the book. No more free
> downloads.
>
> It was fun while it lasted ….
>
> Bob
>
The party never started here
Seems to me that there was a court case where Springer was ordered
to follow through on its promise to release all books and academic
papers to the public domain after something like 5 or 10 years.
Anybody else remember anything like that?
-Chuck Harris
Bob Camp wrote:
Hi
Actually it looks li
Hi
Actually it looks like the party is over. At least from here in the US, when I
go to
the original links, they will only sell me the book. No more free downloads.
It was fun while it lasted ….
Bob
> On Dec 30, 2015, at 7:02 AM, Tom Van Baak wrote:
>
>>> Would other titles be found, it woul
>>Would other titles be found, it would be nice if the links would be
>>shared for them too.
There's a lively discussion about all these wonderful free book/PDF's at the
likes of:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10810271
https://www.reddit.com/r/compsci/comments/3yow1k/springer_is_offerin
In message <568341b9.8030...@rubidium.dyndns.org>, Magnus Danielson writes:
>Would other titles be found, it would be nice if the links would be
>shared for them too.
We really need to make a time-nuts wiki to collect all this stuff in...
--
Poul-Henning Kamp | UNIX since Zilog
Thanks for correction
Will
On 30/12/15 17:12, Bill Byrom wrote:
> I believe you meant a BC-221 frequency meter, which was a very good
> instrument when introduced over 70 years ago:.
> http://radionerds.com/index.php/BC-221
> http://www.orionsword.net/Electronics/TestEquipment/ZenithFreqMeter/BC