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Answer» Is there anyone who can help me to find some literature about theme:
USAGE OF HIGH FREQUENCY SEMICONDUCTORS!
My mother tongue is Albanian and I can't find such of literature in Albanian. I googled, but couldn't find something in studying form, I mean something widely explained including formulas and comparisons with low frequency semiconductors etc.
If someone can help me, I thank him/her in advance.
Cheers for your help. Amazon.com is a great source for technical books, but most of it will be in English.Maybe I can help. I understand you are overseas and it is hard to find stuff. I understand. Quick search: Quote http://ablog.apress.com/?p=231
Bookstores in the Bay Area Posted by Jason Gilmore under Apress
3 Responses to “Bookstores in the Bay Area”
1. steve anglin Says: August 8th, 2004 at 9:24 am
Stacey’s Bookstore ( http://www.staceys.com/ ) on Market Street in San Francisco has a great selection of books, including technical books. While it’s not Powell’s, it’s the best independent bookstore The City has to offer.
As far as just technical books…
There’s DigitalGuru (http://www.digitalguru.com) technical bookshop on Lawrence Expwy, Sunnyvale, CA, maybe the last remaining technical bookshop in Silicon Valley after the demise of Computer Literacy/Fatbrain.
And there’s Nerdbooks (http://www.nerdbooks.com) in Roseville, CA (near Sacramento), a great technical bookstore, located in a not so obvious area bordering on the central valley/Sierra foothills. 2. Mohamed Says: August 5th, 2006 at 8:24 am ... (spam deleted) 3. Manamana Says: May 25th, 2008 at 6:00 pm
The place that I really love is Book Buyers on Castro Street in Mountain View. Great treasures (especially with used books) to be discovered here. You can easily SPEND hours in this SPRAWLING bookstore. Get coffee from the Dana Street Cafe just round the corner.
It is especially a fantastic place if you’re with your spouse and KIDS. I wrote a specific review about that at http://mominacar.com/show_listing_details.php?id=70 ------------
I searched in the California San Francisco Area, because that is where I used to work and there is a high concentration of students and Engineers there. QuoteUniversity Stores Welcome The University Stores support health science excellence by providing retail services and programs that enrich campus life at UCSF. http://campuslifeservices.ucsf.edu/ustores/
The are free downloads from Motorola in PDF. Did you want only transistors? Why not full IC devices that work at HF. And did you really mean HF or VHF? If you want only HF low power, a 2N2222A is as good as anything.
But maybe you want this: http://www.datasheetarchive.com/%22RF+Power+Transistor%22-datasheet.html
EDIT: I Forgot NS.
National Semiconductor has EASY to read technical liturature. Easy if you are an Engineer. http://www.national.com/analog/documents/guides
Here is a up to date news release. You may ENJOY reading this. It is representative of the devices they make. http://www.national.com/news/item/0,1735,1458,00.html
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