Tweet [Crosstalk] An Interview With The Unknown Editor From Microwaves101.com The Unknown Editor is a seemingly tireless creature who can expound at a moment’s notice on topics ranging from skin depth to politics, old television shows, and the great state of New Jersey. Nancy Friedrich | ED Online ID #20584 | January 2009 Whoever said that engineers are humorless never read the editorials on Microwaves101.com. In an industry where web sites often seem to be a company’s last priority, this site offers a regularly updated microwave encyclopedia of technical and historical information. It credits anonymous insiders for their “class participation” and rewards technical contributions with a pink pocketknife. Technical content on the site runs the gamut from basic microwave design theory, a variety of downloadable design spreadsheets, handy microwave calculators, and nearly 100 rules of thumb. Mixed into the content is colorful commentary on topics like the evolution of greed in the US, embedded YouTube videos (for example, Radar Love by Golden Earring), a mortuary containing photos of blown hardware, and countless references to strange historical and pop-culture phenomena blended together with a unique and quirky sense of humor. In this interview, we talk to the Unknown Editor (UE) about what inspired him to start Microwaves101.com and to share some of his thoughts on what it currently means to be a microwave engineer. The UE visited Nancy Friedrich at Penton Media’s Paramus, NJ office undisguised. So if anyone is looking for him, she should be able to pick him out of a police lineup. The UE wishes to disclose that opinions expressed herein and on Microwaves101.com are generally for his own amusement. If you have a bone to pick with him, address your concerns to UE@microwaves101.com. MWRF: Why did you start the Microwaves101.com web site?
My main reason for attempting this project is that there’s a whole mess of great microwave info out there (for example, from old out-of-print data sheets), which needs a home for eternity besides those boxes in my garage. I just want to put information in one place so we can all find it, but I don’t want to answer to anyone about the web site’s style. MWRF: The site is extensive. Do you have many partners? MWRF: Of which part of the site are you most proud?
Being from New Jersey, I have been trained from birth not to be proud. But some of my best work is in the form of Excel spreadsheets in the download area, in which you can manipulate S-parameters, explore the many loss mechanisms of coax, learn about skin depth, find an explanation for performing linear interpolation, and maybe even plot a heart on a Smith chart. On the worldwide web, there’s an entire universe of wikis, blogs, and even twittering that might provide similar information. But the signal-to-noise ratio is at least 20 dB below Microwaves101. It may be annoying to some readers that some of our pages take some time to get to the point (unlike Wikipedia), but we are happy to pursue the middle ground. MWRF: What year did you begin working on Microwaves101?
MWRF: Why do you think fewer US students are attracted to
the engineering field?
MWRF: Please list some reasons to be a microwave engineer.
MWRF: Your web site gets an amazing
number of page views. How come you
haven’t made millions?
MWRF: You get a lot of feedback and questions
from the folks who visit your site.
What are your visitors looking for?
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