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30 Books You Should Read in 2020

Add these books to your TBR (To Be Read) list, pick them up on Amazon or your local bookstore. If you can read them all this year, good on you!  Books You Should Read in 2020 This post contains affiliate links. 1.  An Absolutely Remarkable Thing  by Hank Green 2.  The Alice Network  by Kate Quinn 3.  The Great Alone  by Kristin Hannah 4.  The Summer Wives  by Beatriz Williams 5.  The Oysterville Sewing Circle  by Susan Wiggs 6.  Mrs. Everything  by Jennifer Weiner 7.  One of Us  by Craig DiLouie 8.  On Hitler’s Mountain  by Irmgard A. Hunt 9.  High Achiever  by Tiffany Jenkins 10.  Three Women  by Lisa Taddeo 11.  The Silent Patient  by Alex Michaelides 12.  The Family Upstairs  by Lisa Jewell 13.  Someone We Know  by Shari Lapena 14.  A Nearly Normal Family  by M.T. Edvardsson 15.  The Chestnut Man  by Soren Sveistrup 16.  The Lost Man  by Jane Harper 17.  Talking to Strangers  by Malcolm Gladwell 18.  Educated  by Tara Westover 19.  The

Internet of things (IOT)

Introduction: The Internet of Things (IoT) is an important topic in technology industry, policy, and engineering circles and has become headline news in both the specialty press and the popular media. This technology is embodied in a wide spectrum of networked products, systems, and sensors, which take advantage of advancements in computing power, electronics miniaturization, and network interconnections to offer new capabilities not previously possible. An abundance of conferences, reports, and news articles discuss and debate the prospective impact of the “IoT revolution”—from new market opportunities and business models to concerns about security, privacy, and technical interoperability. The large-scale implementation of IoT devices promises to transform many aspects of the way we live. For consumers, new IoT products like Internet-enabled appliances, home automation components, and energy management devices are moving us toward a vision of the “smart home’’, offering more s

Rocket propulsion

Introduction to rocket propulsion: Rockets range in size from fireworks so small that ordinary people use them to immense Saturn Vs that once propelled massive payloads toward the Moon. The propulsion of all rockets, jet engines, deflating balloons, and even squids and octopuses is explained by the same physical principle—Newton’s third law of motion. Matter is forcefully ejected from a system, producing an equal and opposite reaction on what remains. Another common example is the recoil of a gun. The gun exerts a force on a bullet to accelerate it and consequently experiences an equal and opposite force, causing the gun’s recoil or kick. Figure shows a rocket accelerating straight up. In part (a), the rocket has a mass m and a velocity v relative to Earth, and hence a momentum mv . In part (b), a time Δt has elapsed in which the rocket has ejected a mass Δm of hot gas at a velocity Ve relative to the rocket. The remainder of the mass (m − Δm) now has a greater velocity (v +