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A**W
Written by engineers, for engineers. Very dry and ...
Written by engineers, for engineers. Very dry and difficult to understand for a non-engineer taking a Masters class in satellite communications.
O**F
Four Stars
Great book. Gave a very good introduction to SATCOM.
J**Y
Five Stars
Great reference text for new students on the topic.
S**N
Good book
This was a good book that lays comm out perfectly. They do spend some extra time on orbital mechanics initially, which seems out of place, but it doesn't detract from the book.
A**R
SATCOM
This is a good book. It served me well in the class and as a reference afterwards. Remember Shannon Capacity
W**E
nice breadth that covers this field
For the undergraduate or graduate student in engineering, this is a very understandable text on the basic principles of using satellites to communicate. Many topics in the field are covered. Like a comprehensive listing of existing geostationary satellites, and their orbital assignments.For those of you who need a revision of Keplerian mechanics, Roddy supplies Chapter 2. Or if you need a quick cram on the propagation of radio waves, there is Chapter 4. And there is the all-important subject of antenna design. Whether this be for an antenna on the satellite or here on Earth.Given that communications are of interest, various analog and digital encoding schemes are bruited. By now very well understood. Which leads into a discussion of signal and noise interference on a channel.For all of the topics, like antenna design, or communications theory, there are certainly more indepth books. But the breadth here is a key utility of this book.
J**O
Good Basic Overview, Not Current with Today's IP Technology
I expected the 2006 fourth edition to be more up to date with today's IP satellite technology. While the networking chapter discusses IP, it is in the contex of ATM and TDM technology with little or no information on current IP topologies and satellite Internet IP services like Hughes and BGAN among others. Additionally, there is no mention of current DVB-S or S2 technology which is widely deployed today. Roddy fails to make note of the broadcasting migration to IP with most of the broadcasting information somewhat dated.
C**S
Five Stars
Excellent
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago