Michael Langwiser

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Michael Langwiser

Michael Langwiser

@Miklang

Just a guy who likes tech and bemoans they are destroying college sports with NIL & pro football becoming flag football w/Madden Highlites.

Beigetreten Mart 2011
1.4K Folgt1.5K Follower
Michael Langwiser
Michael Langwiser@Miklang·
@cspanwj CNN is selling desperation on the US side on the negotiations in Pakistan tomorrow . They are taking the Iranian side. Absolutely hilarious. 😂
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Michael Langwiser
Michael Langwiser@Miklang·
@davidaxelrod Try harder David. Our European allies dragging their feet ist helping much. They are going to have to figure out how to defend Europe themselves without relying on the US so much for its defense.
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Michael Langwiser
Michael Langwiser@Miklang·
@cspanwj Amusing to watch Obama talk about how temporary gerrymandering is okay in Virginia.
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Sufyan Maan, M.Eng
Sufyan Maan, M.Eng@sufyanmaan·
Taiichi Ohno built Toyota’s production system. His training method was a literally chalk circle on the factory floor. He’d put a new manager inside it and tell them to stand there and watch! 8 hours No phone No notebook Just watch After an hour they’d come back saying they’d figured out the problem. Ohno would send them back. “Keep watching.” By hour 3 they’d notice the worker reaching awkwardly for a part. By hour 7, the pause before every weld because the operator was waiting on the guy behind him. None of that shows up in a report. Reports compress 8 hours into just a number. The number says output is 94% of target. It doesn’t say why the guy is standing on his tiptoes. Most executives have never watched their own operation for 8+ hours. They’ve read a 1000+ dashboards. Those are not the same thing. By the time it reaches you, it’s just a bar chart. On a bar chart, everything looks pretty fine. The only way out is to go sit in the circle. Sit there until you notice something that isn’t in the summary or bullet points. Because the summary is always wrong in exactly the places that matter.
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Eric Schwalm
Eric Schwalm@Schwalm5132·
While serving with the 5th Special Forces Group, I participated in a one-month leadership exchange program with GE’s Lights and Appliances Division in Louisville, Kentucky. Four leaders from our unit were embedded on the GE campus, where we shadowed and mirrored executives across manufacturing and operational roles. The experience proved profoundly instructive. I received a comprehensive introduction to Lean Six Sigma and the Toyota Production System, and observed these methodologies applied effectively on the factory floor each day. The central principle I adopted is what I term "Leadership by Walking Around", the practice Toyota refers to as going to the Gemba. The approach is straightforward: leaders must leave the office and conference rooms to engage directly at the site of the actual work. At GE, the most effective executives did not manage from behind desks or through reports alone. Instead, they moved among the production lines, observed processes firsthand, spoke with operators, and inquired about challenges and potential solutions. Briefings and PowerPoint presentations convey one perspective. Genuine understanding and meaningful improvement, however, require direct observation in the physical environment.
Sufyan Maan, M.Eng@sufyanmaan

Taiichi Ohno built Toyota’s production system. His training method was a literally chalk circle on the factory floor. He’d put a new manager inside it and tell them to stand there and watch! 8 hours No phone No notebook Just watch After an hour they’d come back saying they’d figured out the problem. Ohno would send them back. “Keep watching.” By hour 3 they’d notice the worker reaching awkwardly for a part. By hour 7, the pause before every weld because the operator was waiting on the guy behind him. None of that shows up in a report. Reports compress 8 hours into just a number. The number says output is 94% of target. It doesn’t say why the guy is standing on his tiptoes. Most executives have never watched their own operation for 8+ hours. They’ve read a 1000+ dashboards. Those are not the same thing. By the time it reaches you, it’s just a bar chart. On a bar chart, everything looks pretty fine. The only way out is to go sit in the circle. Sit there until you notice something that isn’t in the summary or bullet points. Because the summary is always wrong in exactly the places that matter.

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Michael Langwiser
Michael Langwiser@Miklang·
@mdubowitz @therealBehnamBT Agree . They are trying to make them seem like normal US/European politicians like Americans are used to. That way the media doesn’t have to show how poor reporters they really are are defining them.
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Mark Dubowitz
Mark Dubowitz@mdubowitz·
The “moderates” who massacred 40,000+ Iranians on January 8 and 9 have been replaced by “hardliners” as a result of the 40-day war. Thankfully, the media continues its heroic effort to explain Iran as if faction labels mean something.
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Michael Langwiser
Michael Langwiser@Miklang·
That the Iranians need a nuclear program as deterrence against the US
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Michael Langwiser
Michael Langwiser@Miklang·
@cspanwj We shall see if it turns this way
Dasha Burns@DashaBurns

NEW: “Tehran will not bargain away its sources of leverage,” CATO Institute’s @Hoffman8Jon tells me. “Tehran believes it is creating a new status quo between it and Washington. Tehran likely feels it has not inflicted a sufficient level of pain to keep this [war] from happening again and will therefore want real concessions and guarantees from the United States during negotiations. Absent that, they'll return to war, since this is a war of attrition they are better suited to win. All they have to do to win is survive.” Latest in @playbookdc: politico.com/newsletters/pl…

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