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Reg Edwards wrote:
Roy, you are a pessimist. In my career doing electronic instrumentation product development, I learned to look for all the potential problems I could think of, as early as possible. A lot of them turned out to be non-problems, and could then be ignored. But the ones which were real had to be overcome, or at least had to have a good probility of being overcome, before the project could proceed. If it couldn't be, another approach usually had to be found or the project abandoned -- or at the very least an alternative approach had to be identified in case the problem couldn't be overcome. Too often, a naive ("optimistic") project manager wouldn't do this, and would run into a project-killing problem 90% of the way into the project. That can be a disaster, and I've seen it happen many times. Of course, it's ok to go into a project knowing there's a potential program-stopper, as long as you know it up front and are willing to accept the consequences if it can't be overcome. This is the approach often taken by startup companies, but the high risk of failure is too often conceled from the suckers, um, investors. A great number of announcements of revolutionary technology tend to ignore, deny, or minimize potential problems, limitations, and risks. So I don't consider it pessimistic at all to assume they exist. Once in a while, the serious problems are overcome and a new and useful technology emerges. More often, nothing emerges but a lot of investors with thinner wallets and more critical outlooks. I really hope the nano-tubes will bring us amazingly high Q coils. Then all we'll have to do is figure out how to keep them far away from anything else. Gee, maybe some new magical field-masking technology will emerge in the nick of time to solve that problem. There, was that better? Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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