Gary Mintchell

Entries in Podcast (17)

Wednesday
Feb232011

Automation and Media news

Rex Hammock (@r on twitter) and Dave Winer (@davewiner) had a conversation on Dave's Rebooting the News podcast this week. Some interesting and worthwhile thoughts on media and magazines.

Meanwhile, Gary can be heard or seen with thoughts on Automation and a recap of the ARC Forum.

Meanwhile, I'm wrapping up my writing for the March issue of Automation World and preparing for a trip to Phoenix next week where I'm promised a lot of information at the ODVA annual meeting.

Saturday
Feb192011

Automation Minutes Podcast

Leadership in automation. How the leaders who developed ISA88, ISA95, MIMOSA have left a legacy that is readily apparent in products and applications. Now the ISA100 committee leadership needs to take the steps necessary to bring reconciliation and convergence and finish the standard.

Automation Minutes 110

Monday
Feb072011

Manufacturing and Automation Topics

A podcast and video I made for Automation World is now live. I do a preview of the ARC Forum and Packaging Automation Forum plus thoughts about recent acquisitions by ABB and GE, MESA's certification training and automation company stock prices.

I'm in Orlando now. Arrived in time for the Super Bowl party sponsored by Opto 22 (I mention this because it's a little out of the ordinary for that company which usually takes a quieter approach). I've come down here for many years. It's great to see so many people I know, hear gossip that it's best not to repeat and get a sense of the mood of manufacturing and automation. Not to mention, it's usually my first chance to run outside in about three months.

The press conferences begin at 12:30 EST. I saw people from several of the presenters, and it looks like there should be some interesting news. I'll try to post something from each on the blog, and you can follow my twitter stream (the hashtag, I believe, is #ARCforum if you want to search).

The Wall Street Journal has an article on GM this morning reporting that the company plans to greatly expand its "eAssist" technology and "will spread across our entire lineup." The eAssist is not exactly the same as Toyota's "hybrid" but similar. GM says it has beefed up the engine, which has fared poorly thus far in the market.

On the media side of my life, I awoke this morning to news that AOL has purchased the Huffington Post. Some observers I respect voiced disappointment with the move, thinking that the additional page views will hardly give AOL the boost it needs to sell more display advertising (the old/new nirvana for online media). I've heard that HP holds "liberal" as opposed to others' "conservative" views. I tried it for a brief time. It clogged up my feed reader and I could never figure out how to tune it to information useful for me.

Oh, and at least three ISA people made a point of searching me out to say that it was all a misunderstanding last year at Automation Week. The press were, indeed, welcome to visit the conference portion of the event, meet people and conduct interviews. October is always a very busy time, but I'll have to evaluate the value of a trip to Mobile.

Saturday
Nov202010

Teamwork and Leadership in Manufacturing

In this videocast/podcast, I discuss things I've learned about teamwork and leadership during a series of interviews over the past seven weeks. I also discuss the book by Richard L. Daft, "The Executive and The Elephant"--your inner rational CEO and your inner drives and emotions that prevent you from doing what you want. I end with a request for information and speakers on sustainable packaging lines for the upcoming Packaging Automation Forum.

 

 

 

 

Automation Minutes 105

Tuesday
Nov162010

Catching Up on Automation News

Catching up on newsFormatting, Opto, Omron, interesting links, digital pen, and more.
I've just been swamped lately. Lots of news plus new year planning and recovering from trips. Although Saturday, I'm leaving for Nuremberg and the SPS/Drives trade fair. Looks like lots of announcements from the European-based automation companies coming. Just in time to accompany the Thanksgiving turkey.

 

Sorry about the formatting lately. I've been using Dave Winer's OPML outliner/editor to compose with for quite a while. But you can't copy from Microsoft Word and paste into it. You have to save as .txt then copy and paste. So I thought I'd go back to OmniOutliner. It's friendly with Microsoft, but it can't handle text (at least I've tried various settings and nothing works). I haven't figured out the magic formula.

Opto 22 has released a new product that it calls a sensor--but it's a sensor and more. It is designed for energy management and the smart grid with built-in sensing capabilities, connections for additional sensor input and on-board intelligence. Opto has always been at the confluence of IT and control, and this is no different as it includes IT friendly networking and industrial-grade networking. It's designed to help get energy information to the people who actually control how energy is used in near-real-time. See the product write up here

Had a meeting with some of Omron's new management team. Most have been in place for about three years, but I have not had an opportunity to meet them. I've always found the North American operation to be an enigma. And too many heads of marketing with too many changes of direction. Sounds as if the new team headed by Gregg Holst has been concentrating on the basics and getting the ship up and running with the wind rather than against it. They say that revenues are very good, and they are optimistic. Not everyone in the discrete automation space can say the same thing. Here's a company to watch.

Check out this Web site. HylaSoft is working with a digital pen and some software they've written to capture writing as operators and clerks fill out forms and ship the digital image or ASCII text to a computer. This holds promise of making data entry easy and painless. Just fill out the paper form once and eliminate the next process of entering into the computer. Great for Hazop and LIMS reports, digital signatures and the like.

Interesting news on the Stuxnet front. The target keeps pointing at Iran. Seems researchers have found code that points to a couple of specific variable frequency drives that control centrifuges essential to enriching uranium into weapons grade at an Iranian site. Hmmm.

Blevins and Mark Nixon have updated the worksheet Website for their Control Loop Foundation book. I've found the book to be an interesting read, and have passed it along to my new boss to get him up to speed on the other part of automation. He's been dealing with packaging machine automation for several years. This is a whole nuther world.    

Interesting podcasts

 Talk on an experimental site at the US State Department--Opinion Space--with a very interesting technology for handling thousands of comments so that someone can make sense of them. Love to see this on the Automation World Website.

 Great talk on customer service "Everything fails all the time."

Neal Ford at the Rails Conference on constraints--one of the best presentations you'll hear this year.

Interesting discussion on reconfigurable robots, Kasper Stoy.

Finally, Emerson has joined the FDT Group. Are DTMs in its future?