Sep 2 2014
Are Part Numbers Too Smart for Their Own Good? | ENGINEERING.com
[…] technology experts are warning that the use of such descriptive part numbers is not necessarily so “smart,” and that they could drag down productivity in today’s fast-changing manufacturing environments. A smarter tactic, they assert, is to employ auto-generated “insignificant” or “non-intelligent” part numbers and let information about the part reside in a database. […]
Source: www.engineering.com
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“That was random!” is my younger son’s response to the many things I say that sound strange to him, and my computer has Random Access Memory (RAM), meaning that access to all memory locations is equally fast, as opposed to sequential access, as on a tape, where you have to go through a sequence of locations to reach the one you want.


Sep 7 2014
VSM Pitfall: unnecessary process | Chris Hohmann
Source: hohmannchris.wordpress.com
Thoughtful comments, as usual from Chris Hohmann.
However, we need to go further and question the wisdom of reducing Lean implementation to Value-Stream Mapping and kaizen events when neither tool is central to the Toyota Production System.
“Value-Stream Mapping,” which is really materials and information flow mapping, is a minor tool at Toyota, used only with suppliers who have delivery problems. And “kaizen events” don’t exist at Toyota.
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By Michel Baudin • Blog clippings 1 • Tags: Kaizen Events, Lean, Lean implementation, Toyota, VSM