Louis Gary Lamit
•
Gary Lamit ( lamitgary@fhda.edu
)
•
24th year at De Anza (1984), CDI CAD
• 37 years teaching (1971) HS, JH, Technical school, Technical College, CC,
Engineering College, State University
•
41 years in field of expertise (engineering graphics and design) (1966)
•
Industry experience
• 30 publications (Prentice Hall, Merrill, West, Simon and Schuster, PWS, Books Cole,
Thomson Engineering, ITP, Delmar, MobiPocket Book, BookSurge)
•
10 engineering and design fields (Piping, Electronics, Industrial Model Building,
CADD, Descriptive Geometry, drafting, Engineering and Design, Pro/ENGINEER )
•
Biography- from website
• Louis Gary Lamit is currently a full time instructor and department head at De Anza College in Cupertino,
California, where he teaches Pro/ENGINEER, Pro/SURFACE, Pro/SHEETMETAL, Pro/NC, and Expert Machinist, and Unigraphics NX.
Mr. Lamit is one of the founding members of Scholarships for Veterans, a not for profit organization awarding community college scholarships to recent veterans in Santa Clara Valley.
Mr. Lamit has worked as a drafter, designer, numerical control (NC) programmer, technical illustrator, and engineer in the automotive, aircraft, and piping industries. A majority of his work experience is in the area of mechanical and piping design. He started as a drafter in Detroit (as a job shopper) in the automobile industry, doing tooling, dies, jigs and fixture layout, and detailing at Koltanbar Engineering, Tool Engineering, Time
Engineering, and Premier Engineering for Chrysler, Ford, AMC, and Fisher Body. He has worked at Remington
Arms and Pratt & Whitney Aircraft as a designer, and at Boeing Aircraft and Kollmorgan Optics as an NC programmer and aircraft engineer. He also owns and operates his own consulting and training firm, and has been involved with advertising, and patent illustration. He is the author of over 30 textbooks, workbooks, tutorials, and handbooks.
Mr. Lamit received a BS degree from Western Michigan University in 1970 and did Masters’ work at Wayne
State University and Michigan State University. He has also done graduate work at the University of California at
Berkeley and holds an NC programming certificate from Boeing Aircraft.
Since leaving industry, he has taught at all levels (Melby Junior High School, Warren, Michigan; Carroll County
Vocational Technical School, Carrollton, Georgia; Heald Engineering College, San Francisco, California; Cogswell
Polytechnical College, San Francisco and Cupertino, California; Mission College, Santa Clara, California; Santa
Rosa Junior College, Santa Rosa, California; Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, Kentucky; and De
Anza College, Cupertino, California).
•
•
Industrial Model Building , with Engineering Model Associates, Inc. (1981),
Prentice-Hall.
Piping Drafting and Design (1981),
Prentice-Hall.
Piping Drafting and Design Workbook (1981),
Prentice-Hall.
Descriptive Geometry (1983),
Prentice-Hall.
Descriptive Geometry Workbook (1983),
Prentice-Hall.
Pipe Fitting and Piping Handbook (1984),
Prentice-Hall.
Drafting for Electronics , (3rd edition, 1998),
Charles Merrill (Macmillan-Prentice-Hall Publishing).
Drafting for Electronics Workbook (2nd edition 1992)
Charles Merrill ( Macmillan-Prentice-Hall Publishing ).
CADD , (1987),
Charles Merrill ( Macmillan-Prentice-Hall Publishing ).
Technical Drawing and Design (1994),
West Publishing (ITP/Delmar).
Technical Drawing and Design Worksheets and Problem Sheets (1994),
West Publishing (ITP/Delmar).
Principles of Engineering Drawing, (1994),
West Publishing (ITP/Delmar).
Fundamentals of Engineering Graphics and Design , (1997),
West Publishing (ITP/Delmar).
Engineering Graphics and Design with Graphical Analysis (1997),
West Publishing (ITP/Delmar).
Engineering Graphics and Design Worksheets and Problem Sheets (1997),
West Publishing (ITP/Delmar).
Basic Pro/ENGINEER in 20 Lessons (1998)
(Revision 18), PWS Publishing (ITP).
Basic Pro/ENGINEER (with references to PT/Modeler ) (1999)
(Revision 19 and PT/Modeler), PWS Publishing (ITP).
Pro/ENGINEER 2000i (1999)
(Revision 2000i), Brooks/Cole Publishing (ITP).
Pro/ENGINEER 2000i2 (includes Pro/NC and Pro/SHEETMETAL)
(2000) (Revision 2000i2), Brooks/Cole Publishing (ITP).
IX Design CD Text,
ImpactXoft.
Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire (2003),
Brooks/Cole Publishing (ITP).
Introduction to Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 2.0 (2004),
SDC Publishing.
Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 3.0 (2006), Thomson Engineering (ITP)
Moving from 2D to 3D CAD for Engineering Design (2007) BookSurge
Moving from 2D to 3D CAD for Engineering Design (2007) MobiPocket eBook
Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 3.0 Tutorial (2007) BookSurge
• Why do you want to write a book?
• Mantelpiece book, author, or writer?
– Being an author or someone who “wrote a book”
– Being a “writer” (sleep- what’s that?)
• So you want to get rich?
• Self promotion- who are you?
• PAA benefits to writing
• Personal affects- time, money, family, dog time
– Discuss with your spouse (no dear I am not surfing the web)
– Talk with your children (your Billy my second child- correct?)
– Explain to your dog (cats don’t go for walks)
• Writing and Developing Your College Textbook
• Getting It Published:
• Handbook for Academic Authors
• The good- great asset when they mesh with you and your ways
• The bad- will they ever get their fair share done?
– Pressure by publisher to add someone for “special” reasons
• The ugly- conflicts
• The good- the supportive- your boss, and co-workers
• The bad- professional jealousy
– Be prepared
– Administrators (stars versus the moon)
– Co-workers
• Your age
• Your expertise
• Do not let your colleagues and c o -workers pressure you to give away your royalties.
– Let them work 5,000 hours and donate their income.
– If you want to channel some royalties into a good cause start your own scholarship fund with FHDA foundation SFV
( www.scholarshipsforveterans.org
)
The proposal should consist of:
• The Book Title
The proposed title and sub-title of the book.
• A Brief Description of the Project’s Scope and Content
Provide a description of what makes your project distinctive.
Explain how it will benefit the teacher and student, and also include information about the topic coverage, important features, major themes or approach.
• Table of Contents
The subheadings will provide a feel for the depth of the project and its approach.
• Sample Chapters
Two sample chapters that are integral to your project.
• Additional Information
Indicate how long you expect the project to be overall (in number of words or printed pages). Also, please indicate if you envisage using illustrations, such as tables, charts, photographs etc and if so, approximately how many.
• Research existing materials- use the web
• Review all of competitors
• Computer/laptop
• Software- WORD, captures- SNAGIT, application software
• Build a website dedicated to your book
• Proposal
– 3 chapters
• Reviews
– Why your book has a market
– How your book differs from the competition
– Basic overview of what other books lack and how your book will be better
– Length, size, and color of proposed book
– Timetable
Specifications and parameters
•
Page count- length
– Writing is about exclusion more than inclusion
• Text vs. illustration content
•
Copyrighted material
– Fair usage
– Permission forms
• Charts and graphs
• Format – 8 1/2 x 11, 5 x 9, etc.
•
Full color vs. BW, or with color insert
• Hard vs. soft cover or both
• EBook
• CD book (example, IX Design)
• How many illustrations, charts, graphs
•
How many photos
• The paper, the leading, the type font
• Cover design- who does it, who controls it
– Traditional publishers
– EBook
– Self-publishing (BookSurge)
• Do not give your students “discounts”
• Determining the cost of the book-
– Publisher and profits
– Why books are expensive
•
Bookstore
•
Gov regulation
• Tax structure
• Problem sets, sheets, workbooks
• Project sets, sheets, workbooks
• Exercise sets, sheets, workbooks
• On line materials: projects- exercises-
• Instructors guides
• Solutions manual
• CD inserts
• Did the contact have these items hidden in them
• Will they pay me?
1. What can go wrong- West-Delmar
2. Complaints and threats
• Editors and publishers
–
Internal and imprint competition at publishers
• Time line- be realistic
• Royalty percent- 15%normal
– Domestic, foreign, trade sales- percentages
• Trade books- will there be a substantial market?
• Try and get strait percentage on all sales.
–
Advance- taken back from first royalty checks
– Translations- foreign languages- percent?, lump sum?
•
Grants- money not returned (good for expenses- equipment, software, research, etc.)
• Supplementary materials- who generates them and at what cost? Workbooks, projects, exercises, on line support materials, solutions manuals
• Revision cycle- how often?, new version?, or new book? Software books are different than academic books.
•
Contract leverage will depend on
– Your field
–
Potential sales
– Your previous writing experiences
• Out of print books
–
Your copyright
– What happen to my book(s)? When companies buy companies.
• Brown & Benchmark Publishers
• Houghton Mifflin
• HarperCollins
• Prentice-Hall
• W. W. Norton
• Dushkin Publishing
• Little Brown
• Harcourt Brace and Jovanovich
• Worth Publishers, Inc
• McGraw-Hill Publishers
• International Thomson
•
Upon signing
• Grants
•
Advances
• Thick skin
• Usefulness
•
When
• How much
•
Retiring to Tahiti
• Divorces
• Getting your copyright back
• Out of print
• Out of print
•
BookSurge
• MobiPocket