@KennethCassel Cool. Worth noting that it's 'just' a gas station, a very humble business.
But there used to be a culture where every job was worth doing well. Every job worthy of respect. We can bring that back.
The Wayfaring Crow
Set in a factory, so with a water bottle instead of the fabled pitcher.
PumaWrench makes the crow's work quicker and easier.
Produced by Aesop's Fabled Film Studio.
The Crow, the Pitcher and PumaWrench
Crows are clever enough to use rocks to displace water, to recognize shapes, and to use tools.
Maybe also smart enough to use PumaWrench?
Produced by Aesop's Fabled Film Studio.
@kaiarhodes Kaia adding new criteria under "Industrialist"
(To be fair to the question, investors have to get their money out. Which leads to an easy prediction that a high % of IPOs will have founders maintain control via super-voting shares. That's mostly a good thing.)
@saranormous@aphysicist > put a huge amount of his own money into climate
Well, it's good that industrialists who think that was wise now have another source of funding.
@parthingle_x Very impressive to build your own CNC and other machines, and a great example for working through the tradeoffs of vertical integration.
Beyond classic buy/build $: dev time vs. order time; 'owning' maintenance vs. calling a vendor (but on their schedule), etc.
@JLopas@Sachin_and_Adam > Rock-solid operations are a sum of a bunch of little things, all done well, at scale.
Yes!
Similar: the difference between good and great (in software and many other products with lots of features) is 100++ little things. Shave an annoyance here. Add a clever bit there. etc.
Swag Saturday: Yankee Doodle PumawWrench
Invite Uncle Sam and patriotic PumaWrench to a picnic.
paper plate: https://t.co/FOwUJRgei5
napkins: https://t.co/6nxRg73sC4
@gbtechnologia With luck you got what you need. But for general reference:
- I wonder how fast @NoramarkInc quoting is, and whether they have location / turnaround params
- from @mattfreed the https://t.co/hhuhgjqOwd site likely useful
@10_X_eng I have the exact opposite view. 100++ things I want to build. But details are in fact 'hard'.
Laser cut sheet metal is fine one batch, not the next. 3D print sometimes accurate sometimes not. AI still hallucinates. Vendors are slow. etc.
@Whos_Ur_Doggy@10_X_eng I don't disagree, but it's getting better quickly. e.g. for CAD: @BrierRat
I'm sure there are people who have had some success with CNC, despite limitations.