Thursday, March 31, 2016

God Bless Dr. Dave Dornfeld of University of California at Berkeley


I received a very sad email early this past week regarding Dr. Dave Dornfeld of UCB, who was a true thought leader in Mechanical Engineering, a great guy and a huge advocate of MTConnect.  I was at his lab at UCB a number of times for MTConnect meetings over the years.  It was always a tremendous pleasure working with Dave. I sent an email to Dave the morning of his unfortunate death.

Below is the email I received from UCB on Dave's very tragic death:

"We learned today that mechanical engineering professor David Dornfeld, a dear friend to many of us and a true citizen of the College of Engineering community, died on Sunday, March 27 of a heart attack. This news has been sudden and unexpected, leaving us with a profound sense of loss.

 In a long career of service to Berkeley, Dave was most recently faculty director of the College’s new Jacobs Institute for Design Innovation, where he was instrumental in launching the Institute’s educational programs. A faculty member in our Department of Mechanical Engineering since 1977, Dave served as chair of the department from 2010 to 2015. During that time, he led Berkeley’s participation in the Advanced Manufacturing Partnership, a national effort that brought together universities, industry and the federal government to boost investment in manufacturing technologies and best practices.

We remember Dave as an advocate for our students and as a powerful force for good. We owe him a great debt for leading worldwide efforts to advance the emerging fields of sustainable manufacturing and cyber-manufacturing. In the 1980s and 1990s, he nurtured the College’s Robotics, Automation and Manufacturing Program (RAMP); led the College’s Interdisciplinary Studies program as Associate Dean; and directed the Engineering Systems Research Center (ESRC). Dave’s leadership on all these fronts was marked by common sense, humility and, often, well-timed moments of good humor.

 A globally recognized authority in green manufacturing, Dave led Berkeley’s Laboratory for Manufacturing and Sustainability and the Sustainable Manufacturing Partnership. He was a member of the National Academy of Engineering and a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), receiving ASME’s Ennor Award in 2010. He was named vice president of the International Academy for Production Engineering (CIRP) in August 2015. Other honors include the Fredrick W. Taylor Research Medal, the Takagi Prize and the Charles F. Carter Advancing Manufacturing Award. Here in the College, he held the Will C. Hall Family Professorship.

Dave mentored many generations of students who now hold positions of leadership in academia, industry and policy. We will miss him dearly, but we know his legacy will be lasting."

One of my favorite memories was sitting with Dave at a conference almost six years ago:

Dave made a very interesting statement regarding slicing through the data of any presentation.   What Dave basically said was, "anytime you see 40% in a presentation you should be suspect.  The presenter likely did not want to put in 50% because it would be viewed too high and 30% would be viewed as not being significant."

I got a real chuckle out of that and said to Dave, "I think we need to call that "Dornfeld's Law".

To officially state Dornfeld's Law (until Dave corrects me :-)  

 "The statistical veracity of any presentation can be quickly determined by examining both the frequency and relative contextual importance of the number 40% in the presenters representation of supporting data."
I blogged when Dave received this tremendous honor from AMT:

Dr. David Dornfeld, Chairman of the Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Laboratory for Manufacturing and Sustainability at UC Berkeley, has received the Association of Manufacturing Technology's Charles F. Carter Jr. Advancing Manufacturing Award. Dr. Dornfeld is specifically recognized for his research toward advancing the understanding of burr formation and prevention, sustainable manufacturing, micro-machining, precision manufacturing and chemical-mechanical planarization.

Dave wrote a white paper on "Drinking From A Fire Hose", that I blogged about as well.

I also really appreciated it that Dave would mention my book as he did in this article on Green Manufacturing.

God Bless Dave Dornfeld. He was a great, great man and will be sorely missed by all of those many lives that he touched.....





Friday, March 18, 2016

Best of Luck Wally Cassell of Memex



Best of luck to Wally Cassell (far right).  I am standing next to Wally, to my right is Jeremy and on the far left in the photo is Doug.  We would go out and shoot some pool and whoever was on Wally's team would usually win.  We were at Boston Manor in Burlington shooting pool.

Wally is a brilliant engineer and just a hell of a good guy!  He will be greatly missed and I wish him all the best!


                  

                             


Friday, March 11, 2016

Congrats to Whit and Marty Hellman - Turing Award



Congratulations to Whit Diffie, former Sun Fellow and Marty Hellman for this HUGE honor!

I had the great fortune to speak with and see Whit present on many occasions and it was always a true pleasure.  Whit would always make everyone think when he spoke or wrote. What Whit and Marty came up with was absolute pure genius and is the basis of the most important aspects of computing and electronic commerce today.

As stated in the Merced Sun-Star

"This year's $1 million A.M. Turing Award goes to a pair of cryptographers whose ideas helped make the Internet possible. Both men say giving governments control over encrypted communications puts everyone at risk.

Whitfield Diffie, a former chief security officer of Sun Microsystems, and Martin Hellman, a professor emeritus of electrical engineering at Stanford University, introduced the ideas of public-key cryptography and digital signatures back in 1976. The concepts now secure all kinds of data, from online communications and financial transactions to Internet-connected infrastructure like power plants."

The article goes on to state:

"Their award, from the Association for Computing Machinery and mostly funded by Google Inc., is named for British mathematician Alan Turing, and is one of the most prestigious prizes in computing. Past recipients have included Douglas Englebart, who developed the mouse and other computing technologies, and Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn, who developed the key communications protocol behind the Internet."

Read more here: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/news/business/article63335142.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/news/business/article63335142.html#storylink=cpyTheir award, from the Association for Computing Machinery and mostly funded by Google Inc., is named for British mathematician Alan Turing, and is one of the most prestigious prizes in computing. Past recipients have included Douglas Englebart, who developed the mouse and other computing technologies, and Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn, who developed the key communications protocol behind the Internet.

Read more here: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/news/business/article63335142.html#storylink=cpy

Friday, March 4, 2016

Never Thought I Would Say This -- Fox News Did A GREAT Job on the Debate


I watched on YouTube most of the Republican Debate last night and Fox News did a GREAT job.  They did the absolute best of any of the news channels by putting the facts on the screen as well as using videos to really hold these candidates to their own words (especially Trump).

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Great 13 Minute Video on FBI vs. Apple Encryption


This does a great job laying out the entire FBI vs. Apple encryption issue:


Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Michael Moore's New Movie - Where To Invade Next


This movie is not what you think it is when you read the title.  It is absolutely worth seeing and is about ideas that came out of the United States and were embraced by other countries that we should take back.