Voices: Feeley
Have a Minute?
Is Sustainable Manufacturing Important to Your Customers?
ControlDesign.com
By Joe Feeley, Editor in Chief
As you travel through this issue, you’ll find that our originally planned two-part article about higher-level programming languages will be expanded to include a third part in December to complement this month’s Part II ("Higher Level Languages (Part II)") and Part I in October ("Higher Ground—Part I").
We weren’t planning to do this, but in between parts I and II, we got a lot more of your input on the subject. Since machine builder and SI participation is solid-gold content, we were happy to add it to the mix.
Story reaction is hard to predict. There are some articles that I’ll be certain will generate a lot of audience reaction. The feedback can be a fraction of expectations. The opposite is true, too.
Now, in an unvarnished attempt to enlist more participation, I figure it’s a good time to let you know what some of the major story initiatives will be for 2009.
I’m unsure what we’ll get from you for our cover story on green manufacturing for machine builders in April. Sustainable manufacturing is a convenient word to collect all the energy and material saving initiatives that are applicable to manufacturing. Many of them already are routine as part of the mandate to build machines that are more efficient, more productive, and more flexible.
But thus far, it’s unclear what else is being practiced by machine builders. Can recyclable materials replace certain machine components, reclaimable at the end of machine life? Can you replace wire and cable with wireless alternatives? Is there a value proposition here for you?
If you can, even if you want to, is green manufacturing important to customers? Do you think you have a role to advocate for greener machines?
To get a better handle on another hot button term, we’ll turn next October’s cover story over to a discussion of mechatronics and what it means to you as a builder. Have you found better internal collaborative tools? Do they make design better by tighltly integrating all the mechanical, electrical and support considerations along the same timeline?
One more. Next June, we’ll go beyond mechatronics and explore how much collaborative design you’re doing with your customers at that design stage. “Mass customization” isn’t a frivolous term. Your customers need more simultaneous flexibility and customization capability than ever before. Are you talking to each other?
One last thing. You’ve seen some of our more recent Market Intelligence Report videos that include participation from a machine control professional who comments on the report findings.
If you haven’t seen them, here’s a link to one we produced on electromechanical components (www.controldesign.com/mir). We’ll be doing more of these on aspects of motion control, operator interface, controller platforms, drives, motors and sensors. If you’d like to be part of one, just let me know. It’s easier than you think.
More Voices
Have a Minute?
11/10/2008
Is Sustainable Manufacturing Important to Your Customers?
Lean Away From Lean?
10/02/2008
How Do Machine Builders Institutionalize Change? The Tendency Is to Fall Back to Older Patterns
As the World Bulges
09/03/2008
The Cost of Moving Goods, Not Tariffs, Is the Largest Barrier to Global Trade Today
Brain Gain
07/31/2008
There’s A Bit of Healthy Competition There. Something’s Clicked In a Lot of People’s Heads
Offensive Words
06/30/2008
We Assign a Word to a Thought, and We’re Stuck with That, so Be Careful With Words
A Virtually Real Advantage
06/10/2008
The Top Challenge of Mechatronic Product Development Is Lack of Cross-Functional Knowledge or Qualified Systems Engineers
Back and Worse Than Ever
05/03/2008
Why Bother to Get Things Right in the First Place, When You Can Just Apologize for the Screw-Ups and Move On?
Old but New
04/06/2008
What Do Lean Technology Principles Have to Do with Controls and Instrumentation?
The Great Supplier Purge
03/03/2008
What’s the Conversation Like with a Vendor That Disappoints You Enough to Switch?
The Nation Needs to Know
02/06/2008
We’d Love to Have Six, Seven, Maybe 10 Winners From the Major Machine-Building Markets
It Always Takes Connections
01/21/2008
IDC Might Be Quicker to Assemble, but if You Have to Do Fault-Finding and Maintenance, Then It Is Very Difficult to Use
It’s Results That Count
01/02/2008
Just because there’s a More Sophisticated Method Doesn’t Mean It’s Right for You or Your Customers
Look Before You Leap
12/05/2007
China has the appropriate laws to control its intellectual property problem. Enforcement is quite something else.
YourTube.com & 2008
10/31/2007
What ongoing training is vital in order to have a seasoned employee with the right skill sets?
Are They Real?
10/03/2007
Are knock-off automation components from China becoming a major point of concern?
We Peel an RCA Onion
09/07/2007
Learn who are the RCA 2007 winners! Were there any surprices in the winners, did you predict who the winner would be? Find out more here.
New Tools for You
08/01/2007
Our content creation is based on what you, as machine control technology users, tell us are the important issues for which you need information, and now you can call our voice mail and tell us what's important to you.
As the Digital World Turns
07/20/2007
Discussing convergence of various types of networked functions: control, safety, building environment, and physical security.
Happy Birthday to us
06/04/2007
Our editorial staff looks back through previous issues and chronicles everything from salaries and economic factors, to the changing landscape from advances in control, to global market influences.
Why isn’t it safe?
05/01/2007
There are a lot of options to consider when addressing machine safety issues, but as Control Design Editor in Chief Joe Feeley learned at the virtual corner tavern, the end result can be worth it.
They killed Captain America
04/02/2007
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley laments the recent demise of Captain America and sees parallels to Machine Builder Nation’s own version of a superhero gang war for a piece of the global market.
Showing our information age
03/06/2007
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley constantly wonders how we can better present content to you, without wasting your time, and in a way that heads you in the right direction in your product research on the web.
Lean means
02/01/2007
We spend a lot of time spotlighting automation and control best practices among machine builders, yet there’s not a lot of conversation about what lean manufacturing means for them.
That was the year that was
01/08/2007
As we approach the 10th anniversary of our inaugural issue in June, we can’t help but wonder what you remember about 1997. Take this quiz if you think your steel-trap memory is in fine working order.
The truth will set you free
12/12/2006
One part of a well-planned tactical assault on potential customers seems to include making your web site a place for customers to painlessly contribute to, comment and critique what you make, deliver, and support.
A look back at the future
11/06/2006
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley introduces November's look back at 2006, and tells us what to look forward to when we next meet in 2007, Control Design’s 10-year anniversary.
Great expectations
10/10/2006
If you don’t try to approach a level of expected reliability with your more knowledgeable customers, you might find that if you need a new machine and don’t buy it, you pay for it without ever getting it.
Deep dive into brands
09/11/2006
The days of proprietary solutions that locked controls buyers into a supplier are pretty much over. Has a more-open-architecture, standards-based industry dimmed the value of your brand affinity?
Expect to win
08/15/2006
It's easy to make plans that appear to validate that what we do is well-conceived, but unless those actions are measured, tested and challenged, they usually have little value and can end up in a drawer.
Tune out the network noise
07/03/2006
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley brushes aside the propaganda volley surrounding today’s networking environment as just another front in industrial automation’s version of the Hundred Years War.
Innovation insurance
06/01/2006
Machine builders who spend a concentrated amount of time solving today’s problems while thinking about tomorrow’s opportunities are unlikely to hear a customer ask, “What have you done for me lately?”
Never bite the hand that feeds you feedback
05/03/2006
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley wants ControlDesign.com to be the first web resource that members of Machine Builder Nation think of when they have a problem to research and resolve.
Enough data to be dangerous
04/07/2006
CONTROL DESIGN Editor in Chief, Joe Feeley, says an incomplete palette of operating data is just enough to be dangerous, particularly if that data is used to predict profit influences.
Enough to be dangerous
04/05/2006
but it has wide-ranging implications that could spill over into Machine Builder Nation, particularly in the way your customers define the machine performance they need.
Revealing research for the machines you build
03/01/2006
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley discusses a few things that hit him about the results of a new CONTROL DESIGN study that reveals how you research, specify and buy your automation and control products.
Data Chase 2006
02/06/2006
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley expects the pursuit and corralling of operating and lifecycle factory-floor data will do nothing but increase in the future, and he offers more evidence of how this will impact machine OEMs.
The shape of things to come
12/27/2005
Editor in Chief Joe Feeley tells us what's around the corner in 2006, including an increase in the number of CONTROL DESIGN issues you'll receive this year, and some new projects that are underway.
A standard reaction
11/03/2005
Are standards fundamentally a good thing? Editor in Chief Joe Feeley doesn’t believe we’re likely to see an uprising of enthusiasm to return to the black-box era, but he'd like to hear what you think.
With technology, old is a relative term
09/27/2005
The staying power of Oldtimer Technology reminds us to not get carried away with the new, dramatically improved, high-performance automation toys and to simply use what works.
Googlewhack at your own risk
09/01/2005
During NI Week, Editor in Chief Joe Feeley heard about Googlewhacking. Do you Googlewhack? "Play at your own risk," he warns.
Who's Scotty on your Starship Enterprise?
07/28/2005
Maybe the decisions and actions of an industrial machine builder don’t have galaxy-threatening implications if things go wrong, but it can have a profound impact on the viability of a customer and its employees.
Advanced genetics of Ethernet systems
06/30/2005
Ethernet solutions, both wireless and those wire-based real-time industrial hybrids, get lots of play in the Summer issue of Industrial Networking magazine.
A professional Xchange of ideas: priceless
06/02/2005
CONTROL DESIGN's AutomationXchange brought machine builders, end users and solution providers together in a way that couldn't be done at the office or trade shows.
In search of better search engines
05/01/2005
We need you to validate what might be a better technical search engine for specifying and choosing automation components and systems for your machine control applications. Check this new site out.
Are you collaborating with your competitors?
02/22/2005
Suppliers are in growing collaboration with your competitors, which might be affecting you in ways you're unaware of. Read why Editor in Chief Joe Feeley believes in keeping your enemies closer.
Nation Building
10/30/2004
Industrial Factory Automation: Editor in Chief Joe Feeley wants to tell you about the next set of changes to ControlDesign.com and examples we might take from Red Sox Nation.
Road to Perception
06/16/2003
New General Motors ads say, in essence, "We don't suck anymore"
Brain drain hits home
04/06/2003
Some customers come to rely too much on codes. No code, no problem. But with the downsized and retired talent that's gone from many of our factories, maybe they’ve just forgotten how to fix problems.
Brain Drain Hits Home
04/03/2003
New technology solutions are often a lifesaver, but in some situations they carry some risk of placing the care and feeding of your machine outside the knowledge capabilities of your customers.
With energy to spare
09/01/2001
Electricity consumption and its cost is an important issue to machine builders. It’s one of several important angles for gaining competitive advantage that must be carefully explored.
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