Engineers for a Sustainable World Webinar
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Script for Section on Development
- How does OSE develop its products? We follow principles of Extreme Manufacturing - an agile development model based on Extreme Programming. We are defining the meaning of Extreme Manufacturing: lean, test-driven, modular design - with emphasis on achieving Language Agnostic Instructional that results in parallel machine builds - in a single day.
- To achieve single day builds, we apply Module-Based Design. We have 50 machines - and we break them down into about 10 modules each.
- The key to our development methods is documentation, and we are pushing the limits of this by Real Time Documentation - a milestone which we have achieved in the last couple months.
- Our documentation platform looks like this (Dozuki). You can navigate to each of our 50 machines. Select a machine, and you see 4 main topics. The main topic is Modules - which is a tracker for all the development and documentation.
- When you click on Modules - all the different Modules appear. (paste an image of the modules, such as for the Laser Cutter - into the Dozuki graphic - or start a new slide)
- For every module, we have a Development Board Template. This consists of 25 main development points that need to be taken for every machine. (see first page of Development Board Template)
- For every module - we also have other supporting steps - such as all the overall development steps total to about 75. (see first page of Development Board Template spreadsheet)
- But here we will focus on the 25 most critical ones. (I will go through each step)
- Once a step is completed - the results are placed on the OSE wiki - and a link to that wiki page is put in the LINK TO WORK AND PRODUCTS column of the Development Board.
- The point of this technique is that we can design products not as entire entities - but as an assembly of modules - where each module is developed independently. So for example - in the ideal case - we would have a team of 12 people working on each module to fill in all the required development point - and we would have a dozen of such teams - such that on a single day - a team of about 100 engineers could design a complete machine in a single day.
- I would like to propose that we take 12 ESW chapters - and do exactly that - a weekend sprint - where we do a complete design in a day and then get ready for a build. Whe here would like to try this and help me organize this? I am looking for 12 chapter leader that could help me do this.
- The way I could see this is that we have a planning meeting with chapter leaders, who go back to their