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Reviews for Technology transfer in agriculture: An economic appraisal

 Technology transfer in agriculture magazine reviews

The average rating for Technology transfer in agriculture: An economic appraisal based on 2 reviews is 2 stars.has a rating of 2 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2021-09-11 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Kirvette Gaskins
To be honest I wasn't expecting too much from this book, having paid only £1.99 for it in a bargain book shop, but I was aware of the main author through various car magazines, so took a chance! The book begins at the beginning of the Grand Prix championship in 1950, a time when drivers were seen as expendable, with WWII having ended only 5 years earlier, it is perhaps understandable, even if it's not acceptable, that this attitude was common place, but even after the "summer of love" nothing had changed, in fact if anything it was worse! After an frightening accident had befallen Jackie Stewart at Spa, he felt things had to change, in 1970 Jochen Rindt became the first and so far the only posthumous F1 World Champion, despite this Jackie Stewart's safety campaign was met with much opposition and name calling, his courage was even questioned! The book details the difficulties that Jackie Stewart faced from fellow drivers - they couldn't see he was looking after their welfare - callous circuit owners, who didn't see the value in safety improvements, and officials that were out of touch. People may have seen the BBC documentary Grand Prix The Killer Years, which covered the same ground, in fact much of it seemed to have been lifted straight from this book, but where in TV land everything seemed to be rosy in the garden from 1976 onwards, nobody died at a GP that year, conveniently ignoring that although Niki Lauda had survived his fiery crash at the Nurburgring - he had being given "the last rites" in his hospital bed - it was nothing short of a miracle! The TV documentary ends here, job done, whereas the book carries on, and although much if what is covered in the book is well known, much of isn't, such as the dreadful negligence that left Philippe Strieff paralysed, data recorders showing that an accident that left Jos Verstappen just bruised, would have killed him a few years earlier, if you're an avid F1 fan, you may realise that it's not just luck we have to thank for GP racing having no driver fatalities since 1994, if only the same could be said for marshalls, safety is indeed a science!
Review # 2 was written on 2008-03-13 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 1 stars Ricky Arts
This book is so fun to do with any age from elementary to middle school. Reading a boring science textbook takes the fun out of science. Science is about exploring the world and see how the textbook works in the real world. For example their a few about motion which is always talk about in school. This is also fun if you have kids so is educational and keeping them busy. The best part is that it is common items that you may have in your house. Have fun with the experiments.


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