Re: define linearization
Re: define linearization
- Subject: Re: define linearization
- From: "Dennis W. Manasco" <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 22 Aug 2002 02:32:44 -0500
At 6:44 pm -0400 8/21/02, Lee Blevins wrote:
I have 5 rampage boxes, two scitex rips, two copies of presswise,
three copies of IQ Pro, one copy of Postershop, one copy of Full
Auto Frames, one copy of Monaco proof and others I can't remember at
the moment.
You also have the luxury of massive redundancy. If someone steps on a
dongle or shorts it out or whatever, you have fallback solutions. Not
every company has that kind of money.
One the first things I learned in business was to eliminate as many
possible-failure points from essential operations as practicable. The
most important step in doing that is to eliminate as many instances
as you can of process bottle-necks that can cause the whole operation
to fail if a single part breaks. It may not happen for years, but
when it does the results can be disastrous. That's why we back up our
hard disks.
If it's Friday afternoon and your business' solvency depends on
getting product out by Monday morning and something as useless as a
dongle breaks, it's cold comfort to know that it was (supposedly)
your only possible "choice" to rely on it.
Regards,
-=-Dennis
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