Thanks! I think I saw that first book in the library, I might have to give that a shot.
There's two three Fadals, a Johnford, an Okuma, and a Monarch....whatever that means. The two Fadals are what I'm learning on, and the first four machines all have fanuc controls so they're very, very similar from what I understand.
Yeah Fanuc controls pretty much own the market, I think I heard something like 80% marketshare or something. Very solid equipment. The upside is reliability, the downside is going into the future...most CNC vendors I've seen are moving to touchscreens on their new models (because the competition is doing so) and they're keeping the interfaces really, really stupid - like
exactly the same as the physical machines. It's annoying because you could do so much for efficiency and workflow by making things nicer (think iPhone vs. Windows Mobile 6), but they keep the layout really ugly and dumb. Sigh.
As far as PC maintenance goes, I'd highly advise a few things if you use computers to run your machines: (1) have a non-local backup system (like a network backup system like Acronis or something), (2) have a hot-swap drive ready to pop in (in case the HDD dies and you need uptime ASAP - actually have a hard drive in a drawer or something, ready to go), and (3) document the software procedures as much as possible (use Snagit or Greenshot or whatever to make screenshots with diagrams and arrows and whatnot to make operations that you don't do very often really clear).
I kinda wish we could have Ironman technology where you just design out what you want and then have the machines do the rest of the work

Of course...there's always 3D printers... I've worked with an FDM machine in the past - VERY cool stuff:
http://www.dimensionprinting.com/
If you ever get interested in that and want to try a DIY project, MakerBot has the "Thing-O-Matic" DIY 3D printer for $1300: (has about a 3 x 4" print area)
http://store.makerbot.com/makerbot-thing-o-matic.html
They have lots of neat mods, too - 3D scanner, assembly line box for doing multiple parts, etc. They also have a very tiny desktop CNC machine for $700 (I think it's an older version of the Thing-o-Matic), although they're on their last batch:
http://store.makerbot.com/cupcake-cnc-ultimate.html