Algebraic Codes for Data Transmission
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.61 (603 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0521556597 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 498 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-10-27 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Drucker Eminent Faculty Award, and the IEEE Millennium Medal. He was named a Fellow of IBM Corporation in 1980 (where he worked for over 30 years) and was elected to the US National Academy of Engineering in 1990. Richard E. . He is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the recipient of many awards incl
He was named a Fellow of IBM Corporation in 1980 (where he worked for over 30 years) and was elected to the US National Academy of Engineering in 1990. Drucker Eminent Faculty Award, and the IEEE Millennium Medal. . He is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the recipient of many awards including the IEEE Alexander Graham Bell Medal (1998), the Tau Beta Pi Daniel C. About the Author Richard E. Blahut is the Henry Magnuski Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Biff said Completely useless textbook, thow this one to the fire!. This textbook is required reading for UCLA EE"Completely useless textbook, thow this one to the fire!" according to Biff. This textbook is required reading for UCLA EE2Completely useless textbook, thow this one to the fire! This textbook is required reading for UCLA EE231E, a graduate level course. There are virtually no examples in this book, except for the most trivial of cases. If this is all you have to read, then consider spending lots of time in your professors office asking him lots of questions. Consider spending a lot of time reading other texts if you buy this one.. 1E, a graduate level course. There are virtually no examples in this book, except for the most trivial of cases. If this is all you have to read, then consider spending lots of time in your professors office asking him lots of questions. Consider spending a lot of time reading other texts if you buy this one.. Completely useless textbook, thow this one to the fire! This textbook is required reading for UCLA EE231E, a graduate level course. There are virtually no examples in this book, except for the most trivial of cases. If this is all you have to read, then consider spending lots of time in your professors office asking him lots of questions. Consider spending a lot of time reading other texts if you buy this one.. 1E, a graduate level course. There are virtually no examples in this book, except for the most trivial of cases. If this is all you have to read, then consider spending lots of time in your professors office asking him lots of questions. Consider spending a lot of time reading other texts if you buy this one.. "Channel Coding gone wild" according to Helen. I used this textbook for an introduction to Channel Coding class I took (graduate level). I think that the material is difficult, but this book is remarkably clear, considering that. I had no experience with Galois Fields or any of that kind of math before starting with this book, but I was able to grasp it. I think the main thing missing in this book are good summaries for each chapter, giving highlights of the important stuff. Sometimes it's hard to get an overall picture of the material, I got bogged down in math sometimes. Visually, the book is beautiful, good fonts, cha. A deep grasp of algebraic coding theory Yingquan Wu The book is well organized and mathematically rigorous. It depicts a full picture of conventional algebraic coding theory in a systematic fashion. As a specialist in coding theory, I give my highest rank.
Error-correcting codes play a fundamental role in modern communications and data-storage systems. The author describes a range of important coding techniques, including Reed-Solomon codes, BCH codes, trellis codes, and turbocodes. This volume provides an accessible introduction to the basic elements of algebraic codes and discusses their use in a variety of applications. The book is written for graduate students of electrical and computer engineering and practicing engineers whose work involves communications or signal processing.. Throughout the book, mathematical theory is illustrated by reference to many practical examples