Simple and effective techniques for quickly estimating virtually
anything
Guesstimation 2.0 reveals the simple and effective techniques needed
to estimate virtually anything--quickly--and illustrates them using an
eclectic array of problems. A stimulating follow-up to Guesstimation,
this is the must-have book for anyone preparing for a job interview in
technology or finance, where more and more leading businesses test
applicants using estimation questions just like these.
The ability to guesstimate on your feet is an essential skill to have in
today's world, whether you're trying to distinguish between a
billion-dollar subsidy and a trillion-dollar stimulus, a megawatt wind
turbine and a gigawatt nuclear plant, or parts-per-million and
parts-per-billion contaminants. Lawrence Weinstein begins with a concise
tutorial on how to solve these kinds of order of magnitude problems, and
then invites readers to have a go themselves. The book features dozens
of problems along with helpful hints and easy-to-understand solutions.
It also includes appendixes containing useful formulas and more.
Guesstimation 2.0 shows how to estimate everything from how closely
you can orbit a neutron star without being pulled apart by gravity, to
the fuel used to transport your food from the farm to the store, to the
total length of all toilet paper used in the United States. It also
enables readers to answer, once and for all, the most asked
environmental question of our day: paper or plastic?