-- card: 148233 from stack: in -- bmap block id: 0 -- flags: 0000 -- background id: 5566 -- name: -- part contents for background part 12 ----- text ----- DON LANCASTER’S COOKBOOK LIBRARY -- part contents for background part 15 ----- text ----- Menu -- part contents for background part 14 ----- text ----- CRAFT -- part contents for background part 6 ----- text ----- Excerpt -- part contents for background part 5 ----- text ----- 5 of 6 -- part contents for background part 4 ----- text ----- • In mid-1972, an electronic revolution took place. For the first time in electronic history, you could go out and buy a logic gate for a nickel, provided you bought four of them at once in a single 20-cent package. This made the logic gate the cheapest available electronic component—cheaper than most quality resistors and far cheaper than any capacitor, transistor, or most other solid-state devices. These gates were made of Transistor-Transistor-Logic (TTL), a very versatile, widely available, and very fast way of performing logic operations. The extremely low cost did two things. First and foremost, it opened up a fantastic number of still expanding applications for digital circuitry. At long last, doing things digitally was not only better than using traditional analog circuits, but now it was often cheaper as well. — TTL Cookbook -- part contents for background part 22 ----- text ----- • WHOLE EARTH • CRAFT • ELECTRONICS • Electronics Know-How -- part contents for background part 23 ----- text ----- 03024122 -- part contents for background part 30 ----- text ----- card id 78234 -- part contents for background part 31 ----- text ----- card id 148707 -- part contents for background part 32 ----- text ----- stack "WHOLE EARTH" stack "CRAFT" card id 37172 card id 45365 -- part contents for background part 27 ----- text ----- card id 45365 -- part contents for background part 28 ----- text ----- card id 139848 -- part contents for background part 29 ----- text ----- card id 146225