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COFES 2009
April 16-19, 2009
Scottsdale, Arizona
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Joel Orr
Author: Joel Orr Created: 4/15/2006
Joel thinks about and comments on all kinds of stuff

Laiserin joins CADALYST editorial staff
By Joel Orr on 8/28/2007
Jerry Laiserin, a highly regarded AEC automation consultant, architect, and friend of mine, is taking over the "AEC in Focus" column at CADALYST. That's good news for CADALYST and its readers; Jerry's writing is clear, incisive, and authoritative.

Being around for a long time doesn't necessarily mean you've gotten better at what you do--but in Jerry's case, it does. His wisdom and insights have grown with the length and breadth of his experience. Having heard him speak many times, I've found that he always has something new to say, a fresh angle on the world of AEC automation.

Jerry is a leading proponent of BIM - building information modeling - and it will be interesting to read his views on this and other topics monthly.

Congratulations to Jerry and to CADALYST on this new arrangement!
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Remind yourself
By Joel Orr on 8/26/2007

Do you ever leave yourself a phone message to remind yourself of something? Well, you can now leave a voice message - and have it converted into a text email, while still retaining the recording. Go to Jott.com, and sign up for free. Then call Jott from any number you register with them, and leave yourself a message of up to 30 seconds. In moments, it will be in your inbox - text AND voice.

How good is the transcription? Pretty good. With the voice recording to back it up, it's good enough for me.

If you try it, let me know what you think of it.

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So what's with PLM?
By Joel Orr on 8/26/2007
PLM - product lifecycle management - has taken on something of a "fightin' words" character. Dassault and Siemens are promoting it wholeheartedly. Autodesk says it's not real. Smaller companies like Arena Solutions are happy to ride the wave, such as it is.

Some years ago, when the abbreviation (it's not an acronym; acronyms are pronounceable) was introduced, there was a lot of buzz in the industry about defining PLM. Nothing was ever resolved, so when someone says "PLM" today, you better ask what exactly they mean.

But PLM is clearly something - even if we don't agree on exactly what.

End-to-end digital representation of engineering and manufacturing data? CAD + PDM + CAM + ERP + TQM + KBE?

As far as I can tell, those resisting the term seem to be saying, "It's too much to go from today's partly-automated, unintegrated manufacturing enterprises to something as comprehensi ...
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Engineering tech in Israel
By Joel Orr on 7/3/2007
I'm in Israel right now, on my honeymoon. It's hard to find Israeli engineering technology. No, wait, I don't mean it that way; there is a lot of engineering software coming from this tiny country. There are names you'll recognize right away - Cimatron, Smarteam - and others with which you may not be familiar, such as Amdocs and Yedda.com, neither of which is particularly engineering-oriented, but both of which have products working in engineering firms worldwide.

No, what I mean is that these firms are so cool, so savvy, so web, that the fact of their being Israeli elicits no more than "so what?"

High tech is burgeoning in Israel. The country has cracked the marketing code. You may find out that many applications you use regularly are Israeli under the skin. Of course, many do not advertise that fact; anti-semitism is alive and well in the world today.

But if you are looking for a location for a development center, with easy access to talent ...
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Innovative "Rainbow" technology from India stores gigs on paper
By Joel Orr on 11/27/2006
A 24-year-old student in Kerala has come up with a way to encode data densely on paper:
Data Can Now Be Stored on Paper
M. A. Siraj, Arab News
 
&l ...
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Education: Hot topic at COFES India Summit
By Joel Orr on 11/23/2006
The COFES India Summit, held 11/17-18/06 at the Hyatt Regency Delhi, drew an impressive variety of leaders from Indian and US organizations. We are in the process of assembling all the video, audio, and session summaries, and they will soon be posted on the COFES site.

For now, some interesting tidbits:
  • India has a small number of world-class engineering schools, led by IIT; but they turn out only a few thousand graduates per year. There are many other engineering schools, but they are hamstrung by financial issues, keeping them from hiring the kind of faculty that would turn out the kind of graduates needed by the economy.
  • In recent international reports on R&D spending by large firms, no Indian companies had measurable investments in R&D as a percentage of revenues.
  • Infrastructure development in India is quite extensive, and stands to grow even more in coming years.
  • ...
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Engineers and innovation: Conflict?
By Joel Orr on 5/11/2006
Yes, Rachael, everyone does know that loving shiny things is a guy thing. (By the way, that would be a 1956 Chevy, not a '52 - a dour, clunky box...:-))
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Innovation must start with the CEO: IBM study
By Joel Orr on 4/17/2006
Irving Wladawsky-Berger, IBM VP, in "Always On" - http://www.alwayson-network.com/weblog.php
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It's COFES time!
By Joel Orr on 4/15/2006
COFES is a highlight of my year! Ever since we created COFES, back in the last century, this glorious get-together has been a major source of inspiration, networking, and empowerment in my life.
 
It has a been a major factor in encouraging several of my grandchildren to become engineers, for one thing.
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