GE Engineering Reference Sites

Here are several really useful web sites [GE internal & external--some are broken :( ] for our Medical/Technical world...

Description
(Web-links in this column provide more details)

WebSite or Information

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As a great kickoff for the reference section, a guy I knew at GE Medical Reference web page has an excellent portal of relevant, current and interesting eKnowledge sites that relate to the everyday work at GEMS.

There's also a link to The Top-10 Web Sites, a great portal covering almost everything you might want to see, scan and study.

Paul Mullen's GE Medical Reference
Note: some links are stale but majority are a.ok

Try Top-10 also!

 

 

 

 

On the technical front, ever been frustrated and IRRITATED! while struggling to do something simple using Excel? This online extract covers a multitude of tips & traps that will help your headaches.





The folks at both Microsoft & ZDNet also provide a wealth of technical info on multiple fronts.

$20 To Learn How Excel Works

Ask Mr. Excel

Excel Pivot Tables


Microsoft

ZDNet

 

 

 

 

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Scott McOlash is another GE CT software engineer that knew who was managing the CT Engineering web site for some time. This is an invaluable place to locate interesting GE-related information that you may find to be of value.

CT Web Site

 

You should also visit our Main GE CT Web Site for current product data as well as some realtime applications information.

GE CT Site

 

 

 

 

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Now, how about those nasty, tricky and secretive Macro’s??
Here’s a spiffy guide covering the basics of this language and more.

If this information seems to “not quite match” your Excel macro tool (access with Alt-F8), you’re quite probably correct! VB basics are however about 97.3% identical to this info, so you shouldn’t have too many difficulties…

Introduction to Visual Basic

 

 

 

 


CNET.com brings an endless supply of cool technical articles to your screen...


Pix at CNET.com

A more specific drop in this sites' ocean is Tony Karp's page...

Quoting from his summary,
“Every web page is a user interface. It presents information to the user, and the user can interact with it, mostly by clicking on links,
Exactly why you'd want to is, of course, up to you.”


This guy's stuff is really as cool as he sounds, like this Time Greeter:

Stupid Web Tricks

 

 

 

 

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As a very relevant closing note on the medical info section, if you have ever pondered the complexities of cancer (especially malignant brain tumors), try to find a few minutes to leaf through some of the extracts from Don’s personal home page for a "first-person-singular" viewpoint on the subject...

Don's Cancer Page