Congrats to Mark Frauenfelder and his new book release; to the White House for hosting a mini Maker Faire.
Tag Archives: business
Blatant endorsement, no compensation
Surprised is a good word, especially with electronics.
I washed my woodsman brown pants yesterday, forgetting to check the lower pocket which conveniently holds the smartphone.
A great big nod of thanks to the R&D department at Samsung.
My Galaxy S3 smartphone survived the “heavy soil” cycle in our Maytag frontload clothes washing machine.
It rebooted after I shook out water but the screen wouldn’t come on.
The screen came on after I removed protective rubber case, popped off the back cover, removed the battery and let the parts dry for an hour; however, the touchscreen function didn’t work.
My wife suggested putting the phone and battery in a bag of rice.
The glutenous plan worked.
I blew out the rice dust, reinserted the battery, popped the cover back on and all seems well so far. The touchscreen function is more sensitive than ever!
The Local and the Cosmic
My father taught me one important lesson — never take a job because you have to and, even if you need it, don’t act like you do.
Maybe you heard it differently when I directly quoted my father. We sat in his car, I a teenager off from high school for the summer, he working as an “energy efficiency” expert in the role of extension agent for Virginia Tech. We looked out of the windshield at the small entrance to the factory Dad was visiting that day.
“Son, I want you to observe the people you meet today. There are two types — those who work in the front office and those who work on the factory floor. This little burg in an Appalachian mountain valley is what they call a company town. The people on the factory floor do most of their shopping at the local store, which is run by a member of the family that owns and operates the factory. They wouldn’t leave this valley, no matter what, and the factory owners know that. In return for giving the workers better than poverty wages, the owners and managers make sure the workers put in a hard day’s work and spend most of their paycheck getting goods and services they would not have, had the factory not been here. Most of the workers are in debt to the owners because they buy more than they can afford.”
This particular factory made ready-to-wear clothing just like other factories in the area — socks, jeans, that sort of thing.
The owners weren’t bad people but some of them were less caring about the condition of their workers than others.
I remember one factory where the owner complained that he wasn’t getting the level of performance out of the machinery that was promised by the manufacturer. A manufacturer rep had inspected the equipment and said nothing was wrong. The owner contacted the Va. Tech extension office and requested assistance.
When Dad arrived, he interviewed the owner while I sat up front with the secretary for the factory. She was a pretty, young woman who had gone to business school and could type and take dictation as well as manage the petty cash and the file cabinet organisation.
Because I was a good-looking, red-headed teenager, wherever we went Dad sat me down with the secretary to get the scuttlebutt and opinion of the owner/manager.
Sometimes, he took me along for a tour of the factory, especially if he needed a go-fer to measure distances or equipment size.
In this case, Dad made me stay with the secretary because the boss was a little agitated and wanted to personally unload on Dad about adult stuff.
After Dad toured the plant with the owner and one of the shift supervisors, he collected me, along with a box of jeans that the secretary insisted on giving me as a present for being so kind and attentive.
On the way back to the extension office in the basement of a wing in the Martha Washington Inn in Abingdon, Dad told me what the boss had said.
Basically, the man wanted to increase factory output to at least 100 percent capacity in order to stay profitable and ahead of the cheap knockoffs that were starting to flood the market. If so, he could lower prices and remain competitive. If not, he would either have to let workers go or close the factory and he didn’t want to abandon the business because it had become his life’s work and he wasn’t ready to give it up.
Dad returned to the factory without me and took temperature measurements around the equipment (mainly large cutting or sewing machines). The temperatures were only slightly elevated and did not account for a lower-than-expected output.
He returned a second time, with me along to observe.
He asked me to strike up a conversation with one of the workers and ask dumb, “innocent” teenager questions about what’s it like to work in the factory.
Dad already knew what I reported back to him before I told him.
It was not the equipment that was the bottleneck which slowed down production.
It was the workers.
They were operating in temperatures that were too high for humans to tolerate for eight to ten-hour shifts at a time, especially in the summer.
Dad submitted his findings to the boss, who did not accept that the workers, whom he trusted as loyal and hard-working, were the cause of the problems, and requested that Dad redouble his efforts to find the root cause.
Dad told me that this is the difference between management and labour.
He rewrote his findings, suggesting that to lower the equipment temperature down to a more productive capacity, large industrial fans should be installed in both ends of the factory (basically a long metal building, thinly insulated against cold).
The boss took Dad’s suggestion as a good sign that the manufacturer rep had missed something obvious, felt better for consulting Dad and installed the fans.
The factory output increased significantly. The boss was happy and gave Dad a great recommendation.
I recall that incident any time I hear a major figure in business such as Elon Musk wax poetic about the future or give away patents.
We get so wrapped up in our jargonese that we sometimes forget the fact we are one species on an insignificant planet of a solar system in one of a few billion known star systems we call the Milky Way Galaxy.
On the door mat labeled “WATCH CATS,” on the exact same spot where Merlin sat for a photograph, rests a telescope pointing down toward the ground, reminding me that my feet are usually stuck to terra firma rather than floating amongst the stars.
Merlin spent most of his life in this house and I spent most of the last seven years in this house with him and his brother Erin, who sits nearby.
Merlin taught me a lot in his sixteen years on this planet. I was never completely sure who was management and who was labour but I didn’t care — symbiotic love clouded the logic in such thoughts.
I think Elon gets the same message…
The 30-Minute Woodsman Methodology
Instead of agile design, I went with the woodsman design methodology to build a bridge across a wet-weather creek bed.
Simple is better!
I saw several fallen cedar trees in the woods beside our driveway and the light bulb in my gulliver lit up, dim though it may be.
Why build the ol’ tree trunk log bridge?
After all, I didn’t name my company Tree Trunk Productions for nothing!
I found a log with a relatively flat side, used my handy-dandy D-shaped hand saw to remove limbs on that side and flipped the log on its flat side to drag it to the dryish creek bed.
I test fit the log to determine which branch stubs under the log to shorten and use as support stakes in the ground.
After setting the log in place I stood on the log and felt it was too bouncy for regular traffic to Merlin’s grave in the woods.
I found a rock up in the woods, tested its fit under the log — a little too high and unsteady. With a spade I dug out a solid footing for the rock and repositioned the log on top.
Thirty minutes and the job was done, using all-natural materials for the bridge; a Stanley 35′ PowerLock2 measuring tape to estimate the log length I needed (16 feet), a Great Neck bow saw to cut the log, and a now old-n-rusty spade I got as a “honey do” wedding present back in 1986 to set the rock in 2014.
Job done!
Time for a mid-morning snack and then find a place to fly my electric RC planes in the early summer stifling heat.
More great news!
Mr. Dumser just posted a thank-you letter for Maker Bot 3D Printer for CSDHS:
“Thank you once again for your donation to Community School of Davidson’s 3D printing program.
The donation of the Makerbot 3D printer has generated a great deal of interest in 3D printing in our school. Since we are a high school, this printer is a pivotal piece of technology that has enabled us to offer a brand new curriculum next year for our students. In the 2014-2015 school year we will be offering a 3D printing/ rendering class.
Students are very excited about this new technology. We unveiled the printer during the grand opening/ribbon cutting of our new arts wing that was completed this year. The printer alone drew crowds of inquiring and excited parents and students. Many of our middle school students have even expressed interest and the future of the program looks very bright.
The goal for this project going forward is to enable our students to become proficient in the use of design software and manage their own end product development taking it through the printing stage. This is a very exciting time for us and your donation helped to make this all possible.
With gratitude,
Mr. Dumser”
SOLD
A few (many) Earth years ago, I bought a 1962 Dodge Lancer from Eddie Shimpock using profit I made from the exercise of stock options while an engineer at Conexant Systems. Eddie had repainted the car after buying it from the original owner because the car had sat on the side of the driveway turning brown with mold/algae, ruining the factory paint.
I towed the car from the Charlotte, North Carolina, area, to Big Cove, Alabama, and worked on shining it up some more.
I felt fortunate that the car pretty much had all its original parts and proudly drove it to a local AACA (Antique Automobile Club of America) event where the organisers encouraged me to enter the category for most original car of the 1960s [or something like that].
I beat out Ford Mustangs and some Chevys for first place.
It was exciting, let me tell you!
Well, I noticed the car overheating a bit on the trip to the show so I returned home and removed the radiator (after draining it, of course) to get to the noisy water pump.
The impeller inside the pump had rusted down to a nub.
Not having a welding shop of my own to build a new impeller and wanting to get the Dodge back on the road as soon as I could I bought an NOS (new old stock) water pump and installed it.
Refilled the radiator system and the car engine system ran smoothly.
Sure, the dash-mounted pushbutton selector for transmission gears was a bugaboo sometimes, with the plastic “buttons” (more like odd-shaped rods) falling into the dash, requiring removal of the dashboard to find and remount them.
Otherwise it was a fun car to drive to UAH (University of Alabama Huntsville) classes and for my work commute.
One day, the car almost drifted into a busy intersection. Quick analysis showed that the brake system was not working. I used the emergency brake to stop the car when I needed to and parked it on the side of my driveway when I got home.
Time doesn’t stand still for anything.
Sure, I meant to work on the car again.
But I didn’t.
I threw a cover over it and washed it occasionally.
Eventually the cover deteriorated.
I tossed the cover in the rubbish bin.
The car once again sat as a Petri dish for mold and algae. It hosted hungry squirrels who left empty hickory nut shells piled on the engine block. A mouse died in the floorboard. Spiders left cobwebs behind. Poison ivy, vinca and Virginia creeper wound their way up the tires into the wheelwell.
It was time to give that metal love of mine to someone new.
Billy stopped by last summer and offered to buy the car and a truck.
I gave him a verbal agreement to sell both to him.
Six months passed by as he paid for the truck and said he’d remove it from the property, having not paid for the car.
Sadly, there will come a time in some relationships where trust is lost.
Time and again Billy said “I’ll come get the truck next week.”
Well, cry wolf too many times and trust disappears.
A few days ago a determined gentleman named Wylie stopped by, negotiated a price for the car and promised to bring cash.
He fulfilled his promise. Not only that but he showed up with a friend and a trailer to remove the car yesterday.
The car was hard to get out of the side yard but he was able to drag it onto the driveway but not onto the trailer.
Wylie returned today with new friends, winched the car on the trailer and was about to leave when his friend Eugene offered to buy the truck.
Billy promised again to get the truck this week. I’m sure he thinks he means to — after all I gave the title and keys to the truck to him on faith he was going to haul it away months ago.
We’ll see. I want to trust Billy. I really do.
Actions speak louder than words.
As I get rid of more stuff in my life to lighten the load, so to speak, giving me the courage/opportunity to travel to Mars, I make decisions that aren’t going to make everyone happy.
If Billy doesn’t get the truck this time, I can with a clear conscience say I gave him ample time to do so and seek a new buyer.
I don’t have time to be Mr. Nice Guy to people who [un]knowingly test a reasonable time limit on my patience.
Ice glass sunset
Compare Google’s advert focus plan to rising income inequality
Look at Google’s AI advert focus plans and ask yourself, are we chasing customers with less or more disposable income to spend?
Big Data Analytics
Have you looked at the data lately? In the United States, the vehicle miles driven has decreased while the number of automobile insurance adverts seems to increase more and more every day.
Is insurance a good product to be propping up our mass media outlets instead of other consumables?
What about the change in vehicle sales and vehicle sales adverts?
What is the trend I’m missing here?
What are the opportunities I could be grabbing if I had better insight into what BDA (Big Data Analytics) should be showing me at a moment like this?










