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TRIZ Journal's October Issue

TRIZ Journal’s October Issue

| On 28, Sep 2015

WE ARE FAST-FORWARDING TO OCTOBER!

 

You may be wondering why we skipped the September Issue. Long story short, moving forward we will be releasing the issues for that month by the first of the month, rather than toward the end, which didn’t make a lot of sense!

 

With that said, we have been working with many talented and generous authors, and are excited for this October Issue of The TRIZ Journal featuring three unique additions to the community. As the TRIZ Journal evolves, so will our monthly issues. With your help, we will continue to build the TRIZ Journal into a more robust source on all things TRIZ. Stay on the lookout for an upcoming “Issue Feedback Survey.” Every day we learn how to do this a little better, and we look forward to your input. In the meantime, if you have thoughts on how to improve the issues moving forward or would like to submit an article for an upcoming issue, please contact me at Derek.Bennington@BMGI.com. I look forward to connecting with each of you personally via email or my LinkedIn profile.

Thank you for your dedicated support of the journal. We are excited for what the future holds!

Derek Bennington
Managing Director

FEATURED OCTOBER ARTICLES

 

Graphene sheet model , 3d illustration

Sooner or later, almost everyone who seriously studies TRIZ and Systematic Innovation, starts wondering about the history of TRIZ: why there are so many TRIZ tools, what followed what, and how both TRIZ as a discipline and the community around it have been evolving. Read More

 

 

 

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Case Study with TRIZ: Allocation System for a Processing Machine

The allocation of sheet metal parts for further treatment is currently done manually. The demand for decreasing station times to utilize the processing machine to its full capacity brought up the need for a partially automated allocation system. Read More

 

 

 

 

 

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Mark Barkan’s New Book: Success Factor

Renowned physicist Leo Szilard proposed a simple, yet elegant image: Let’s represent all human knowledge as a ball. Then the space outside of the ball is unknown territory. The surface of the ball symbolizes the border with the unknown. Read More