Short-Range Wireless Communication: Fundamentals of RF System Design and Application (Demystified) Review
Posted by
David Hamer
on 11/21/2011
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Labels:
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Average Reviews:
(More customer reviews)I read the book from cover-to-cover and found it to be very well-written with a good assortment of pertinent topics. The field is so diverse that no single text of reasonable size could possibly hit on every aspect of wireless communication, but Mr. Bensky does an excellent job of presenting what would be of interest to the engineer either just out of college or switching focus into the realm of WLAN, Bluetooth, RFID, etc.
Beginning with the basics of transmission lines and the Smith Chart, the book progresses naturally through modulation techniques, transmitter and receiver fundamentals, and on through system design and regulatory requirements. This book is definitely one that a newbie would appreciate. Oh, and the CD with my book worked just fine (one reviewer claimed to have problems with it).
In my own effort at publishing the RF Cafe website, I seek out sources of information at all levels of complexity to provide accessible resources for visitors to the site. Mostly I focus on entry-level content for pages I create and provide hyperlinks to sites with all the in-depth material. The content of "Short-range Wireless Communication" represents precisely the type of content I would include on RF Cafe, so that explains why I think highly of the book ;-).
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Alan Bensky is an electronics engineering graduate of Union College in New York. He earned his master's degree from the Technion in Haifa, Israel. He has spent several years developing short-range radio equipment for security systems and other uses. He is currently an independent contractor specializing in wireless development projects and he also advises companies on design tasks and issues involving U. S. and European communication standards.
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