Preface

When the first edition of this dictionary was published in 1961, today’s everyday items like color TVs, VCRs, CD players, computers, FAX machines, ATMs, cordless and cell phones, pagers, tape recorders, digital watches, pocket calculators, lasers, and many others too numerous to mention, were non-existent or mere laboratory curiosities. Since then, electronics has undergone significant changes based primarily on the meteoric expansion of integrated circuits and their apparently limitless applications. Vacuum tubes were replaced by semiconductors, and numerous technologies like ferrite core or bubble memories were relegated to the electronics graveyard. No other industry has ever grown so much and matured so fast, paced by technological ...

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