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Does anybody think the day will come when man can harness Trouser Gas?
Gallows humour is what the British are famous for.When my grandad died I took the day off for his service, he was cremated. The next day I went back to work still upset and in the canteen, one of the lads says to me \"Have a nice barbeque yesterday?\" and about fifteen others pissed themselves with laughing. I laughed myself, even though it hurt. My mate who said it though came up and gave me a big cuddle, and the rest of the boys made a fuss and took me under their wing as I was a young lad then. This banter and support got me through a very tough time.
Quote from: \"Savvy\" post=146583Billy, following on you post on a serious theme, the Japanese will be fine and will no doubt re-build in a manner designed to combat any increased threats to their structures. The vast majority of their economy recovery following the second world war can be attributed to a gentleman called William Edwards Deming. He was sent to Japan by Eissenhower at the end of the war, and he told them that if they would embrace the principles that he taught them, they would have the rest of the developed world screaming for protection within 5 years. The rest as they say is history, no one takes the piss out of Japanese quality now as they did when me and thee were kids eh? Being in the industry that you are, can I recommend a book for your reading list. If you can get a copy of \"Out of the Crisis\" by William Edwards Deming Cambridge Press 1986 it will change your thought processes no doubt, it certainly did do mine!!!!Never heard of that Savvy, but I'll definitely dig it out. Ta for the head-ups.I find Japan fascinating. How a country can go from being more bestial than Nazi Germany (at Nakning in 1937, in three weeks of carnage they massacred Chinese civillians at 30 times the rate that the Nazis killed Jews at Auschwitz, and without the efficiency), to being flattened by American fire-bombs, to being a peace-loving, uber-efficient global manufacturing machine, to becoming a stagnant economic disaster-zone in the space of one lifetime is amazing. They must have a real culture of \"Yes sir - we do what you say.\" Fantastic when it is put to positive use - bloody awful or terrifying when it isn't.
Billy, following on you post on a serious theme, the Japanese will be fine and will no doubt re-build in a manner designed to combat any increased threats to their structures. The vast majority of their economy recovery following the second world war can be attributed to a gentleman called William Edwards Deming. He was sent to Japan by Eissenhower at the end of the war, and he told them that if they would embrace the principles that he taught them, they would have the rest of the developed world screaming for protection within 5 years. The rest as they say is history, no one takes the piss out of Japanese quality now as they did when me and thee were kids eh? Being in the industry that you are, can I recommend a book for your reading list. If you can get a copy of \"Out of the Crisis\" by William Edwards Deming Cambridge Press 1986 it will change your thought processes no doubt, it certainly did do mine!!!!
Quote from: \"BillyStubbsTears\" post=146731Quote from: \"Savvy\" post=146583Billy, following on you post on a serious theme, the Japanese will be fine and will no doubt re-build in a manner designed to combat any increased threats to their structures. The vast majority of their economy recovery following the second world war can be attributed to a gentleman called William Edwards Deming. He was sent to Japan by Eissenhower at the end of the war, and he told them that if they would embrace the principles that he taught them, they would have the rest of the developed world screaming for protection within 5 years. The rest as they say is history, no one takes the piss out of Japanese quality now as they did when me and thee were kids eh? Being in the industry that you are, can I recommend a book for your reading list. If you can get a copy of \"Out of the Crisis\" by William Edwards Deming Cambridge Press 1986 it will change your thought processes no doubt, it certainly did do mine!!!!Never heard of that Savvy, but I'll definitely dig it out. Ta for the head-ups.I find Japan fascinating. How a country can go from being more bestial than Nazi Germany (at Nakning in 1937, in three weeks of carnage they massacred Chinese civillians at 30 times the rate that the Nazis killed Jews at Auschwitz, and without the efficiency), to being flattened by American fire-bombs, to being a peace-loving, uber-efficient global manufacturing machine, to becoming a stagnant economic disaster-zone in the space of one lifetime is amazing. They must have a real culture of \"Yes sir - we do what you say.\" Fantastic when it is put to positive use - bloody awful or terrifying when it isn't.Me and you both Bill, you'll find that the majority of what they do is not rocket science, its basic common sense combined with the ability to listen as well as talk.Whilst at Sunderland University I had the opportunity to visit the Public works department at Washington. The example being made was how a public sector company could work in the private sector. The bill of goods was the public works being able to quote you for a set of double glazed windows ratber than Safe style UK or Everest et al, and the public works would undercut and fit said windows! At the factory, the final product involved a ten stage process which included as the last stage, you've got it, \"inspection\".Now the Japanese have a process called \"poka yoka\" which is basically a mistake proofing system. The basic tenaments are that as a process you accept no defects, you create no defects, and you pass on no defects, if all of this is achieved at each stage of the process, final inspection becomes obsolete, unfortunely in this country, we've not managed to get on that paradigm yet!!!
Quote from: \"Savvy\" post=147153Quote from: \"BillyStubbsTears\" post=146731Quote from: \"Savvy\" post=146583Billy, following on you post on a serious theme, the Japanese will be fine and will no doubt re-build in a manner designed to combat any increased threats to their structures. The vast majority of their economy recovery following the second world war can be attributed to a gentleman called William Edwards Deming. He was sent to Japan by Eissenhower at the end of the war, and he told them that if they would embrace the principles that he taught them, they would have the rest of the developed world screaming for protection within 5 years. The rest as they say is history, no one takes the piss out of Japanese quality now as they did when me and thee were kids eh? Being in the industry that you are, can I recommend a book for your reading list. If you can get a copy of \"Out of the Crisis\" by William Edwards Deming Cambridge Press 1986 it will change your thought processes no doubt, it certainly did do mine!!!!Never heard of that Savvy, but I'll definitely dig it out. Ta for the head-ups.I find Japan fascinating. How a country can go from being more bestial than Nazi Germany (at Nakning in 1937, in three weeks of carnage they massacred Chinese civillians at 30 times the rate that the Nazis killed Jews at Auschwitz, and without the efficiency), to being flattened by American fire-bombs, to being a peace-loving, uber-efficient global manufacturing machine, to becoming a stagnant economic disaster-zone in the space of one lifetime is amazing. They must have a real culture of \"Yes sir - we do what you say.\" Fantastic when it is put to positive use - bloody awful or terrifying when it isn't.Me and you both Bill, you'll find that the majority of what they do is not rocket science, its basic common sense combined with the ability to listen as well as talk.Whilst at Sunderland University I had the opportunity to visit the Public works department at Washington. The example being made was how a public sector company could work in the private sector. The bill of goods was the public works being able to quote you for a set of double glazed windows ratber than Safe style UK or Everest et al, and the public works would undercut and fit said windows! At the factory, the final product involved a ten stage process which included as the last stage, you've got it, \"inspection\".Now the Japanese have a process called \"poka yoka\" which is basically a mistake proofing system. The basic tenaments are that as a process you accept no defects, you create no defects, and you pass on no defects, if all of this is achieved at each stage of the process, final inspection becomes obsolete, unfortunely in this country, we've not managed to get on that paradigm yet!!!Not sure there's such a thing as a mistake-proof system. Certainly not in Japan anyway, as recent events highlight. Probably the stupidest place on the planet to build so many nuclear power stations, given the geology.
Another example was quoted by an American management guru called Tom Peters. He gave the example of a contract between an American firm and a japanese manufacturing company. The contract was for tens of thousands of a specific component that had to be manufactured to a very tight specification but allowed a small % (1% I think) to be outside the tolerance. When the shipment was delivered, the Amercians found a package that contained the 1% that were out of tolerance, and were clearly labelled as such!