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Reviews for Simulation and Optimization of Furnaces and Kilns for Nonferrous Metallurgical Engineering

 Simulation and Optimization of Furnaces and Kilns for Nonferrous Metallurgical Engineering magazine reviews

The average rating for Simulation and Optimization of Furnaces and Kilns for Nonferrous Metallurgical Engineering based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2012-10-23 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Rachel McHugh
Delicious Deming. Even better (or at least more concise) than Out of the Crisis. Inspires me to keep digging and read the related reading by Scherkenbach, Orsini, and others.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-09-28 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Nick Bulmer
I didn't know what to expect from this - and it turned out to be one of the strangest reads I've had for a long time. The tone of the whole book reads like the translation I have of The Art of War. Despite being brief, Deming covers a huge amount here. The key topics are: * systems - treating organisations as wholes rather than bags of parts * variation - understanding why the output of a system is not perfectly uniform, and the impact this has on correct management * knowledge - building theories to predict the future over merely consuming information noise * competition - why it is harmful to systems, and how it can be avoided * leadership - and the importance of human psychology in this Deming draws on many powerful anecdotes to explain his point. I prefer, however, the more coherent approach to describing systems found in The Goal. Where Deming gets real leverage is in his descriptions of the Red Bead and Funnel experiments. The Red Bead experiment is more famous, and illustrates the futility of judging people according to their part in a system they are largely helpless to control. But I found the Funnel experiment even more enlightening - illustrating not only the terrible consequences of naively managing by results, but how this can distract from simple solutions to improve a process. Slightly disappointing is the emphasis on manufacturing/repeatable process over design/creative process. Deming makes one reference to design but does not directly tie this into his management style. Deming has an agenda. He wants to replace the current system of management - isolated, competing business units; reward schemes; ignorance of theory, variation and psychology - with one of co-operation, intrinsic motivation and understanding of systems. And he wants to replace it in all forms of organisation. But as a social manifesto it has one alarming omission: biology. Deming appears to think that the problem of growing larger and larger co-operative systems is just one of more difficult management. But this assumes that all people want to co-operate in this way, that nobody has a personal, conflicting agenda. While a monopoly may be more efficient than a marketplace, and while it may be in the long-term harmful to abuse a monopoly position, that doesn't stop someone manipulating their way into a position of power and taking short-term advantage. The weakness of Deming's vision is, in my opinion, that it does not contain the assumption that some people will always be selfish and/or evil. Overall, The New Economics is an immensely valuable collection of ideas for anyone in management (or suffering mismanagement), or with an interest in social change. But I suggest having some skepticism for its idealism.


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