By the late 1990s and early 2000s, the fourth and fifth editions of Electronic Communication were out of print for long stretches. Used copies sold for exorbitant prices on half.com. That’s when the PDF emerged. It began not as a cracked file, but as a labor of love. A professor at a community college in Ohio scanned his personal copy, chapter by chapter, on a flatbed scanner. He shared it with his students via a clunky FTP server. One of those students uploaded it to a Usenet group. From there, it spread to BitTorrent and file-hosting sites.
For students at the time, the name "Roddy and Coolen" carried a weight similar to what "Horowitz and Hill" meant for circuit designers. But while other books focused on abstract theory, Roddy and Coolen did something radical: they treated electronic communication as a living, breathing system. Electronic Communication By Dennis Roddy And John Coolen Pdf
Then came the internet.
Eventually, newer editions by other authors, including updates from Roddy himself (before his passing), incorporated digital communication standards like QPSK, OFDM, and CDMA. But the old PDFs of the 1980s and 90s editions endure. They circulate on academic forums, engineering Discord servers, and personal GitHub repositories. Librarians frown upon them. Publishers ignore them. But students revere them. By the late 1990s and early 2000s, the
The PDF of Roddy and Coolen became a legend in its own right. It was messy—the diagrams were often skewed, the OCR (optical character recognition) sometimes turned "capacitor" into "capacifor"—but it was complete. For a student in rural India, a hobbyist in Brazil, or a self-taught engineer in Kenya, that PDF was a gateway. It explained how a cellular call is handed off from tower to tower, how a television signal carries color and sound on the same wave, and how noise ultimately limits every communication channel. It began not as a cracked file, but as a labor of love