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Beer Review: Georg Schneider’s Wiesen Edel-Weisse Ale

November 25th, 2006 No comments

This beer is USDA Organic, so it has that going for it. It’s made in Bavaria, Germany and brewed according to the Reinheitsgebot. Sounds good so far. I don’t think it is necessary to call it Georg Schneider’s Wiesen Edel-Weisse Ale. The name is already long enough, and I don’t care about Georg Schneider. What is he? An ego-maniac or something? Like “Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert” back in the 80′s, his name only detracts from the brand, in my opinion. Or maybe Georg Schneider is the brand. Maybe something catchier would be better.

Anyway, Georg Schneider’s Wiesen Edel-Weisse Ale is a hefeweizen. Bottle fermented, unfiltered with a bunch of yeast and sediment. Cloudy and yeasty. Not my style, but if you like that, you might as well try this beer. I didn’t hate it any more than other hefeweizen’s I’ve had.

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The Quality Devolution

November 11th, 2006 No comments

Did you ever wonder how Japanese automobile manufacturers utterly outclass their American counterparts? In quality? In value for the dollar? If you are familiar with the work of W. Edwards Deming, then you already know the answers to those questions.

Deming started out in Japan after World War II as a statistics expert assisting in the Japanese with their census. His statistical approach to manufacturing processes was enthusiastically accepted by the Japanse and lead to their quality revolution. Deming’s approach was adopted briefly in the United States in the 90′s, out of the necessity to keep up with the Japanese. The movement, known as Total Quality Management (TQM) here, died out when the gutting of the U.S. labor regulations through NAFTA and GAT, and widespread outsourcing that followed made cutting labor costs easier than saving money by increasing efficiency and quality.

So when you notice that the quality of products and services have taken a nose-dive in the past 20 years, you can be comfortable in the fact that it is not your imagination. And no, it’s not the fault of the slacking gen-x 20 somethings.

I had the opportunity to run operations at a printing ink manufacturing company for 5 years and oversee the implementation of Total Quality Management principles, so I’ve had very direct experience of how this philosophy results in higher quality products, increased efficiency, and higher morale, which means a happier workplace.

Here are Deming’s 14 points for management, that the captains of US industry dropped like a hot-potato as soon as they could:

1.”Create constancy of purpose towards improvement”.
This alludes to the replacement of “flying by the seat of your pants management” with long-term planning. Planning isn’t cool or exciting, so a lot of people tend to skip it.

2.”Adopt the new philosophy”. This means that the leadership of the business must buy into Total Quality. Because working towards long-term goals necessarily has short-term costs, this is a VERY difficult pill for American entreupeneurs, CEOs and the standard corporate bean-counters to swallow.

3.”Cease dependence on inspection”. This is the core of the philosophy for me. It means that you need to look at manipulating the process to reduce errors, variation and waste, rather then inspecting and adjusting after the process has been completed.

4.”Move towards a single supplier for any one item.” A single supplier means less variation, which translates to less waste and higher efficiency in a process. Then of course, you can’t pit supplier against supplier to get a lower price.

5.”Improve constantly and forever”. You can never be finished looking at, and improving your process. The typical view that most managers have is that errors come from people and aren’t an expected result of the process (which is dead wrong). So instead of looking at the process at all, they get down on their people for errors they make, which creates a downward spiraling of morale.

6.”Institute training on the job”. Standardized training to standardized procedures is manditory. From my experience, training is usually done off the top of the head of whoever happens to be available at the time, and it’s usually not the best person for the job. Training is mission critical, and not just an annoyance or interruption of the workday.

7.”Institute leadership.” Leadership is a tough one, since morale is usually so low due to incompetant management. If you can get your managers and supervisors to have the big picture and lead instead of push employees, you are a rare one indeed.

8.”Drive out fear.” Management by fear is self-defeating, and is generally the way it is done. It creates low morale and employees that don’t have the company’s best interest in mind. It perpetuates the management-class bigotry that hourly workers are stupid and untrustworthy.

9.”Break down barriers between departments”. This is where the “internal customer” concept came from. Everyone you provide a service to, including people in your own company, are the customer and should be treated as such. Unfortunately, some people enjoy their power-trips, so this is a tough one. Hard enough for them to be civil to external customers, let alone internal ones. BUT, to the extent you can drive fear from the workplace (#8) and have upper management buy into the philiosphy (#2) and not dump on people from on-high, number 9 gets much easier, and more natural.

10.”Eliminate slogans”. The whole idea that you can eliminate errors in your shitty process by telling your employees to “try harder” through whatever condescending slogans you come up with is dissed by Deming. It’s the process, stupid!

11.”Eliminate management by objectives”. Quotas are quantitative. If you want to improve quality, you need to look at things qualitatively. In fact these two aspects are opposed to each other. Increase quantity output, all other things being equal, will necessarily lead to a decrease in quality.

12.”Remove barriers to pride of workmanship”. This is morale again. Very important not only to keep your employees from becoming your enemies, but to have them actually care about what they are doing.

13.”Institute education and self-improvement”. This means you have to really care about your employees, and want to help them become better people, because in doing so the whole quality of your organization will improve.

14.”The transformation is everyone’s job”. So even the biggest and most important of bosses have to change the way they do (and see) things. And the lowest and most looked-down-upon employees must be brought into the process. The former is the hardest because of a little thing called “arrogance.”

So I can only hope and pray the Total Quality Managment comes back into style. It’s like that song I used to see on The Little Rascals – “How ya gonna keep them down on the farm, now that they seen Paree?” I seen the Paree of TQM and I ain’t goin’ back to that hillbilly 70′s management style farm no-how!

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New Blogs

October 24th, 2006 No comments

I’ve just created two new blogs! I’ll be recording my personal entries, such as event, beer, restaurant and small business reviews, and other thoughts of a personal nature in my new blog Plate O’ Shrimp.

This blog will now be called “Pleasanton Web Design Blog” and will host my technical, and business postings. I’ll be recording my entries related to genealogy and family history at Persons Past – Family History and Genealogy.

It seems like a natural progression to split the blog into pieces. The basic reason is so that Web searchers, as well as my regular reader(s) will be likely to find more articles of interest in close proximity, rather than having to wade through the variety of diverse topics that I have previously posted in the same blog.

This is actually a long terms strategy, as I will undoubtedly lose hits in the short-term by siphoning articles off to less established blogs. Hopefully though, once the new blogs are established, the result will be more pageviews per visit all around.

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The Cacti Widders, The Careless Hearts and The Muckruckers at the Blank Club

October 21st, 2006 No comments

My heart was broken tonight. Not my careless heart. My regular one. About a year or so ago I went to the Blank Club in San Jose to see a band called the Swingin’ Utters, and was blindsided by the hard, almost heavy metal 4 piece psychobilly support act called the Cacti Widders. With a stand-up bass, pro skateboarder Tom Knox on drums and fronted by charismatic guitar god J.D. Goodwin, I haven’t been so pleased in quite some time. I went to the merch table right after their set and plunked down the $10 for their album “One Way Ticket.” Although the production isn’t great on the album, the songs carry it. I recommend it, if you like rockabilly/psychobilly, and don’t mind some “swears,” and if you can find it (Fallen Angel Records).

When I heard they were playing tonight at the Blank Club, and I actually had the evening free, I was down. I arrived too early, and to kill time I had an excellent cheese quesadilla down the street. When I got back, the Muckruckers were playing their set to a handful of people. It was good solid punk rock. Energetic execution and good original songs. They also did a great cover of Del Shannon’s “Runaway.”

Next up were The Careless Hearts. They were country sounding, but the kind of country I kinda like. Johnny Cash-like, with excellent vocal harmonies and musicanship all around. I was particularly impressed by Guitar player, Derek See. The more I looked at the bass player though, the more he looked like Andy Rigali, the bass player from my past bands Love Gone Mad and Big Nose. I got up close, and his stance, his ill-fitting clothing and his Fender bass had me convinced that it was Andy. I went to the merch table to ask the lady, who was undoubtedly the girlfriend of one of the band members, what the bass player’s name was. As soon as I got up there though, everybody got excited because they thought I was going to buy a CD. One guy pointed to the back and said “That’s a great song.” The girlfriend got all smiley, ready for the sale. When I asked about the bass player, she didn’t know his name, because he had just joined the band. She went into the crowd and asked another girlfriend, and it turns out his name is Bob Morton or something. So I bought a CD. It’s good. Production isn’t great, but songs are strong. I’d really recommend seeing The Careless Hearts live though.

Finally it was time to see, from Visalia California, The Cacti Widders.

First I spotted pro skateboarder and drummer, Tom Knox, setting up his sparkle green drum kit. Then the stand-up bass player with the headband, then the rythym guitar player with the black Les Paul. But no lead singer/guitar player/frontman J.D. Goodman. Maybe he was out in the car or something. But no, he wasn’t. He was gone. The band started, and the rythym guitar player was now the lead guitar player and singer. He got through it, but it wasn’t the same. I went to the merch table to ask the guy what happened to the other guitar player. He had landed a job with the CDF (California Department of Forestry). Then I noticed the singer for The Careless Hearts was at the merch table, so I asked him to sign my CD:

His name is Paul Kimball, and he wears Elvis Costello glasses like the ones featured in the liner notes.

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Pleasanton Gridlock – Traffic on Santa Rita Blvd and Valley Avenue

October 20th, 2006 No comments

Last year I started getting emails complaining about the traffic situation in the area where I live. They definitely had my ear, because at the time I was driving my daughter to and from her elementary school, and really didn’t enjoy the gridlock I encountered every day. I had to time it right, because if I got there too late, after the middle school and high school let out, I’d be sitting in traffic for an additional 15 minutes. My boss couldn’t figure out why it took me 45 minutes to an hour to pick up my daughter, when her school and our apartment were 5 minutes away from work. Of course she could have easily walked to school herself… if the traffic wasn’t so bad as to be an unacceptable hazard.

The reason for the traffic appears to me to be purely political. Communities need to plan for growth. Pleasanton citizens did this in the 80′s when they put the Stoneridge Drive Extension into the General Plan. However residents that live near where the extension is planned don’t want it because it will impact them. They are apparently influential enough to gum up the works, to keep this planned and funded extension from happening. The result? Horrible traffic elsewhere.

Time to point out that I’m not an expert on this situation, just a citizen who has done as much research before an election as I have time to. A couple of weeks ago I was in an accident on Valley near Santa Rita, so this is really my cause now, and the deciding factor in who I choose to vote for in races for Pleasanton Mayor, and Pleasanton City Council. If you want to do your own research, go to Stop Pleasanton Gridlock. There is a plenty of good information, and links to articles to give you a fairly balanced view.

So who are my picks?

Pleasanton Mayor: Steve Brozosky – He seems kind of wishy washy on the subject, but appears to support the Stoneridge Drive Extension. The mayoral incumbant, Jennifer Hosterman opposes the Stoneridge Drive Extension. She proposes bandaid measures to appease the citizens angered by the traffic caused by failure to follow through on the General Plan. My opinon. My run-on sentence.

Pleasanton City Council:
Cheryl Cook-Kallio
Jerry Thorne

City Council candidates opposed to the Stoneridge Drive Extension are Brian Arkin and Dan Faustina. Funny that there were 3 people on the corner of Valley and Santa Rita last night waving red and white “Brian Arkin” signs. I thought to myself “That’s pretty distracting. They are going to cause another accident.” How true on so many levels.

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Inappropriate Google Adsense Ads

October 13th, 2006 No comments

Sometimes I think it’s kind of funny how ridiculous the Google Adsense ads on my right column are. They are supposed to be ads that would help my visitors based on the content displayed on my blog, but they are usually just downright stupid. I’ll have to change my name to keep the ads for “Bottle caps” from appearing. I guess ads for bar accessories and brewing plants come from the title of my blog too (along with my beer reviews). If Google would just allow me to block the keyphrase “bottle cap,” I might actually get some useful Adsense ads, and maybe even some clicks. Until then, I’ll have to settle for being amused by their absurdity.

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More on Holland and the Netherlands

October 10th, 2006 No comments

Check out this page if you are interested in Holland: Holland and the Netherlands.

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Website Launch: CBSI-Cummings Construction

October 7th, 2006 No comments
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Beer Review: Eindhoven Special Reserve Dutch Lager

October 4th, 2006 2 comments

It’s also from Holland. Isn’t that veird? But since it said “Dutch Lager” on the label I was momentarily confused. I had just finished a lager from Holland – Bavaria Holland. Now I had a Dutch lager. Variety is the spice of life. Then I remembered the Dutch are from Holland. Sure enough, it is imported from Holland. That has always confused me. Couldn’t they have just been the Dutch from Dutchland, or the Hollanders from Holland? Anyway, this stuff is actually brewed in the Netherlands, and who knows what those people are called. I certainly don’t.

This beer tastes exactly like Bavaria Holland, so much so that I got a Bavaria Holland bottle out of recycling to compare. The shoulders are a little higher, so not identical, but very close. Same green glass. Same great taste.

Eindhoven Special Reserve Dutch Lager Factoids:

  1. Imported by Logret Import and Export Company, City of Industry, CA, U.S.A.
  2. Brewed at the Eindhoven Bierbrouwerij, Shinnen, The Netherlands
  3. Imported from Holland (lie?)
  4. Professed to be brewed in the great Dutch tradition, using only natural ingredients.
  5. It is on sale at Safeway for $5.99 per sixpack.
  6. It has a little label on the neck that is affixed to the bottlecap, giving it the appearance of being tamper-proof.
  7. It’s delicious and you should buy some.
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Turn off AutoCorrect in Microsoft Word 2000

October 2nd, 2006 No comments

Do you struggle against Microsoft Word? Does it insist on changing the text you type from the way you want it to look to the way Word “thinks” it should look? This can happen a lot if you’re typing documents that aren’t prose, like planning documents or outlines, that use sentence fragments or otherwise don’t follow the rules of proper english grammar.

Try this: From the top menu bar choose Tools > AutoCorrect. This will bring up the AutoCorrect dialog. You get 4 tabs to choose from:

  • AutoCorrect
  • AutoFormat as you type
  • AutoText
  • AutoFormat

Now click or unclick the box next to the thing that is bugging you. You win! You’ve beaten Word at its own game!

For more detailed instructions, check here:

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/287911/en-us

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