ACCU Home page ACCU Conference Page
Search Contact us ACCU at Flickr ACCU at GitHib ACCU at Facebook ACCU at Linked-in ACCU at Twitter Skip Navigation

Search in Book Reviews

The ACCU passes on review copies of computer books to its members for them to review. The result is a large, high quality collection of book reviews by programmers, for programmers. Currently there are 1949 reviews in the database and more every month.
Search is a simple string search in either book title or book author. The full text search is a search of the text of the review.
    View all alphabetically
Title:
Microprocessor Interfacing and Applications
Author:
MA Mustafa
ISBN:
0-7506-1752-7
Publisher:
Newnes
Pages:
432pp
Price:
£22-50
Reviewer:
Chris Hills
Subject:
embedded systems; internals and hardware
Appeared in:
11-2
There are already many books on this subject. So what sets this book apart? It stresses requirements and planning rather than bits and addresses.

The text is in 16 chapters each looking a separate category such as motors or switching. After an introduction each chapter seems to be largely exercises and examples, all with answers directly following. The text is largely just that, text. There are small fragments of circuits and pseudocode. However the pseudocode contains a lot of GOTO's and appears to have a pedigree in BASIC. The circuit diagrams are more theoretical than practical. Many are at block diagram level.

The text often presents more than one solution to a problem, usually hardware and software approaches. This coupled with its emphasis on the requirements and definitions is one of the books good points. Unfortunately the detail in this book is not good enough to make it a cookbook for hobbyists or engineers. Whilst it talks about interfacing to microcomputers is not specific to any commercial machine or CPU. It will get you thinking and present ways of solving the problem but implementation is up to you.

I would have to say that this book could be used as an additional course book. Useful for students but engineers will need something else. Could do better!