Engineer at Large: The Essential Guide to Structured Problem Solving and Creative Innovation
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.73 (557 Votes) |
Asin | : | B013CVOXRY |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 334 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-01-16 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
He is the author of the critically acclaimed book “TRIZICS - Teach yourself TRIZ, how to invent innovate and solve ‘impossible’ technical problems systematically” and as a pioneer in the field of Dry Etch in semiconductor device fabrication, has published numerous papers including “A discussion of Post Etch corrosion techniques for Aluminium Alloy Dry Etching Processes” presented at Semicon Osaka 1989, “Addressing Post Etch Corrosion”
He is the author of the critically acclaimed book “TRIZICS - Teach yourself TRIZ, how to invent innovate and solve ‘impossible’ technical problems systematically” and as a pioneer in the field of Dry Etch in semiconductor device fabrication, has published numerous papers including “A discussion of Post Etch corrosion techniques for Aluminium Alloy Dry Etching Processes” presented at Semicon Osaka 1989, “Addressing Post Etch Corrosion” - Semiconductor International Magazine, May 1989 and “Dry Etchin
Richard Platt said Exceptional Book for Root Cause Problem Solver. Gordon has produced another excellent book for Systematic Innovation and TRIZ users. Of particular note is that he includes an all important chapter on alternative methods of root causing problems - this is one of the key elements that every engineer / problem solver needs to have in their tool box. He manages to cover all of the really critical steps and tools that are otherwise unavailable to problem solvers from the Six Sigma and Lean schools of thought when it comes to solving tough, complex problems.. "Excellent" according to AnishP. A handbook that should be in the top drawer of every engineer's desk. Excellent guide to TRIZ and problem-solving.. Five Stars Excellent book
In every case, the problem was always solved quickly and without fuss, by systematically applying the structured problem solving steps described in this book. Sometimes teams of engineers had been working on a problem for months, or a solution was needed urgently in order to keep production going. A critical addition is the introduction of TRIZ (the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving) to the engineer’s problem solving arsenal. The methodology described incorporates well known standard structured problem solving steps with some key additions. The key to success was, and is, to have the discipline to perform and complete every step sequentially. As an “ENGINEER AT LARGE” it was the author's rol