Re: irrational fear of flying
There is a difference in doing a product that is designed by running the numbers and saying we need to be at a price point so engineering takes a back seat...I give you the AMC Gremlin that had that weird rear end that was slanted which was to cut 200 bucks off the production cost as opposed to doing what is right for back seat passengers in a crash. Or to be proper, engineering the product first and then running the numbers.
Since this is a cycling forum (and tying together the crash in Japan and the Alaska incident because it shows how detail and bigger thinking prevents problems while lack thereof creates them)...I just got a new crankset from Sugino. Even the shipping box that the product box was in was thought out...to the point where they made sure the metal staples across the flaps were at cross positions so that there was no way the box would open no matter how badly the carrier handled it. Whereas the crankset it is replacing is Shimano which is manufactured "okay" but seem to be having issues in staying ok. Oh, and the QA on the alignment of rings to spider is not so hot.
It is about attention to detail and thinking "bigger". The auto mechanic who just replaces the broken part or the mechanic who says "why did this break" and spends the time to figure out how it happened so that he can prevent it from happening again.
I could go on and on with examples where it made a difference (Leon Hess knowing when I referenced a given gas station in a town on Long Island NY that "oh you mean the one with 12 pumps" at a moment when his company owned hundreds of gas stations is my favorite. Probably the only gas station chain you could actually sit on the toilets because of that detail attention).
So, not necessarily a corporate thing but more and more a corporate thing which is bad for consumers/ society/ the environment (all the crap gets thrown out rather than used for people lifetimes)/ etc.
I know, yelling at clouds again.
« If I knew what I was doing, I’d be doing it right now »
-Jon Mandel
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