I'm a huge INRIA fan so I decided to play with Esterel a while back. If people call Haskell an 'academic' language, I have no idea how an average person would describe Esterel. "Thinking in" Esterel is going to be a huge shift for the traditionally trained CS guy who's never touched a circuit. Half the people in our field didn't even go to go to school for CS[1]. Hell, I've got a decent amount of LabVIEW and Verilog experience, and even I have trouble with it.
That being said, it's interesting and those resources are definitely going on the Kindle. Do you have a link to your thesis ? (Judging by your comment history, it has a high likelihood of being quality).
[1] Not to denigrate those who were less traditionally educated. The brightest engineer I know is a high-school drop-out. They however were motivated enough to read Sipser, Gunter, B Peirce, and all the standard texts (again, not as a requirement to read All The Fancy Books, but just to enrich his own mind for the sake of knowledge - without that curiosity, one might have a difficult time being more than a code-monkey (not that there's anything wrong with that, but I personally have the scratch of "how does this work" that I need to keep on itching compulsively)).