This important new book bridges the gap between works on classical control and process control; and those dealing with HVAC control at a more elementary level; which generally adopt a qualitative and descriptive control. Both advanced level students and specialist practitioners will welcome the in-depth analytical treatment of the subject presented in this volume. Of particular significance are the current developments in adaptive control; robust control; artificial neural networks and fuzzy logic systems; all of which are given a thorough analytical treatment in the book.First book to provide an analytical treatment of subjectCovers all new developments in HVAC control systemsLooks at systems both in the UK and abroad
#3096452 in eBooks 2002-09-11 2002-09-11File Name: B000Q3651Y
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Four Stars (Fiction / 2332 Kindle Locations)By The ChroniclerWritten in the 18th century this book recite the adventures of the titular character Baron Munchausen as told by himself. The complete document was written over a few decades by multiple authors who added the stories. The interesting point about the stories that they are exaggerated but touted as real by baron. Most of the stories are quite interesting and well written though some chapters in the middle can feel slightly dull mostly due to the change of writer I assume.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. I enjoyed the Munchausen book immenselyBy Paul D MarchI enjoyed the Munchausen book immensely. The Adventures is a wonderful fantasy of folklore and surreal humor. Its a strange concoction of gory cartoonish humor with the folk tale-like grimness and violence of the Brothers Grimm stories. The Baron is a delightful raconteur.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Absolutely delightfulBy diskrybeThis is the definitive masterwork of tall-tale-telling that reaches awe-inspiring heights of imagination. The Baron is a breathtaking liar. And the illustrations add to ones enjoyment and the sense of time and place. For me; reading this book was also a deeply nostalgic experience -- it took me back to my younger days growing up in Eastern India; where books were my world. Having seen the world however and moved out of India to the west; by the time I finished the book I was surprised to find myself experiencing a new feeling underlying all the hilarity. A sense of deep sadness. The baron exemplifies the predominant European approach to animals -- they exist in order to be shot -- and they must be shot not necessarily to be eaten; but as a form of "sport." Which is why; in just the space of one lifetime; we have taken the deep forests and oceans and skies alive with beating wings and turned them all into mountains of trash.