tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3757196015838742198.post8629367469806816120..comments2017-10-04T06:43:36.759-05:00Comments on LIVING ORDER: On becoming a project leader: The Doctrine of EnoughAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00738876176000144878noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3757196015838742198.post-68513853868824499592015-11-18T12:42:38.223-06:002015-11-18T12:42:38.223-06:00Wonderful :) Through a series of great quotes, by ...Wonderful :) Through a series of great quotes, by well-respected people, you layer this idea onto the reader. I balk at the term "doctrine", but oddly I find it appropriate here. Thanks for another inspiring post.Tobiashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06180151784422555016noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3757196015838742198.post-53706620370520116472015-11-16T21:08:24.127-06:002015-11-16T21:08:24.127-06:00"Good enough" theory is against Taguchi&..."Good enough" theory is against Taguchi's Loss Function. By being good enough ( conforming to USL or LSL ) , we make great loss to society. <br /><br />The author has taken a complex example (million single-string airline parts) to explain the effect of simplicity on reliability. Instead,the author could have taken just 3 parts in a system ( say a set of light bulbs )and how reliability of the whole system is reduced even if individual part's reliability is higher and the reliability of the whole system increases if the same components are connected in parallel.<br />In situations where everything looks important, pair-wise comparison technique could be used to fish out the most and more important ones.<br /><br /><br />O Arivazhagan " Ari "http://www.iipmchennai.comnoreply@blogger.com