How To Build A Better Toaster.

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by Net Jockey, Mar 30, 2009.

  1. Net Jockey

    Net Jockey Geek Trainee

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    How To Build A Better Toaster
    ==============================

    Day 1: My boss, an engineer from the pre-CAD days, has
    successfully brought a generation of products from Acme Toaster
    Corp's engineering labs to market. Bob is a wonder of
    mechanical ingenuity. All of us in the design department have
    the utmost respect for him, so I was honored when he appointed
    me the lead designer on the new Acme 2000 Toaster.

    Day 6: We met with the president, head of sales, and the
    marketing vice president today to hammer out the project's
    requirements and specifications. Here at Acme, our market share
    is eroding to low-cost imports. We agreed to meet a cost of
    goods of $9.50 (100,000). I've identified the critical issue in
    the new design: a replacement for the timing spring we've used
    since the original 1922 model. Research with the focus groups
    shows that consumers set high expectations for their breakfast
    foods. Cafe latte from Starbucks goes best with a precise level
    of toast browning. The Acme 2000 will give our customers the
    breakfast experience they desire. I estimated a design budget
    of $21,590 for this project and final delivery in seven weeks.
    I'll need one assistant designer to help with the drawing
    packages. This is my first chance to supervise!

    Day 23: We've found the ideal spring material. Best of all,
    it's a well-proven technology. Our projected cost of goods is
    almost $1.50 lower than our goal. Our rough prototype, which
    was completed just 12 days after we started, has been servicing
    the employee cafeteria for a week without a single hiccup.
    Toast quality exceeds projections.

    Day 24: A major aerospace company that had run out of defense
    contractors to acquire has just snapped up that block of Acme
    stock sold to the Mackenzie family in the '50s. At a company
    wide meeting, corporate assured us that this sale was only an
    investment and that nothing will change.

    Day 30: I showed the Acme 2000's exquisitely crafted toast-
    timing mechanism to Ms. Primrose, the new engineering auditor.
    The single spring and four interlocking lever arms are things
    of beauty to me.

    Day 36: The design is complete. We're starting a prototype run
    of 500 toasters tomorrow. I'm starting to wrap up the
    engineering effort. My new assistant did a wonderful job.

    Day 38: Suddenly, a major snag happened. Bob called me into his
    office. He seemed very uneasy as he informed me that those on
    high feel that the Acme 2000 is obsolete - something about
    using springs in the silicon age. I reminded Bob that the
    consultants had looked at using a microprocessor but figured
    that an electronic design would exceed our cost target by
    almost 50% with no real benefit in terms of toast quality.
    "With a computer, our customers can load the bread the night
    before, program a finish time, and get a perfect slice of toast
    when they awaken," Bob intoned, as if reading from a script.

    Day 48: Bill Compguy, the new microprocessor whiz, scrapped my
    idea of using a dedicated 4-bit CPU. "We need some horsepower
    if we're gonna program this puppy in C," he said, while I
    stared fascinated at the old crumbs stuck in his wild beard.
    "Time-to-market, you know. Delivery is due in three months.
    We'll just pop this cool new 8-bitter I found into it, whip up
    some code, and ship to the end user."

    Day 120: The good news is that I'm getting to stretch my
    mechanical-design abilities. Bill convinced management that the
    old spring-loaded, press-down lever control is obsolete. I've
    designed a "motorized insertion port," stealing ideas from a
    CD-ROM drive. Three cross-coupled, safety-interlock micro
    switches ensure that the heaters won't come on unless users
    properly insert the toast. We're seeing some reliability
    problems due to the temperature extremes, but I'm sure we can
    work those out.

    Day 132: New schedule: We now expect delivery in three months.
    We've replaced the 8-bitter with a Harvard-architecture, 16-
    bit, 3-MIPS CPU.

    Day 172: New schedule: We now expect delivery in three months.

    Day 194: The auditors convinced management we really need a
    graphical user interface with a full-screen LCD. "You're gonna
    need some horsepower to drive that," Bill warned us. "I
    recommend a 386 with a half-meg of RAM." He went back to design
    Revision J of the PC board. Day 268: New schedule: We now
    expect delivery in three months. We've cured most of the
    electronics' temperature problems with a pair of fans, though
    management is complaining about the noise. Bob sits in his
    office all day, door locked, drinking Jack Daniels. Like
    clockwork, his wife calls every night around midnight, sobbing.
    I'm worried about him and mentioned my concern to Chuck.
    "Wife?" he asked. "Wife? Yeah, I think I've got one of those,
    and two or three kids, too. Now, let's just stick another meg
    of RAM in here, OK?"

    Day 290: We gave up on the custom GUI and are now installing
    Windows CE. The auditors applauded Bill's plan to upgrade to a
    Pentium with 32 Mbytes of RAM. There's still no functioning
    code, but the toaster is genuinely impressive. Four circuit
    boards, bundles of cables, and a gigabit of hard-disk space.
    "This sucker has more computer power than the entire world did
    20 years ago," Bill boasted proudly.

    Day 384: Toast quality is sub-par. The addition of two more
    cooling fans keeps the electronics to a reasonable temperature
    but removes too much heat from the toast. I'm struggling with
    baffles to vector the air, but the thrust of all these fans
    spins the toaster around.

    Day 410: New schedule: We now expect delivery in three months.
    We switched >From C++ to Java. "That'll get them pesky memory-
    allocation bugs, for sure," Bill told his team of 15
    programmers. This approach seems like a good idea to me,
    because Java is platform-independent, and there are rumors
    circulating that we're porting to a SPARC station.

    Day 530: New schedule: We now expect delivery in three months.
    I mastered the temperature problems by removing all of the fans
    and the heating elements. The Pentium is now thermally bonded
    to the toast. We found a thermal grease that isn't too
    poisonous. Our marketing people feel that the slight
    degradation in taste from the grease will be more than
    compensated for by the "toasting experience that can only come
    from a CISC-based, 32-bit multitasking machine running the
    latest multi-platform software."

    Day 610: The product ships. It weighs 72 lb and costs $325.

    Bill is promoted to CEO.
     
  2. donkey42

    donkey42 plank

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    plank, it's bread you put into a toaster

    light & cheap :good:

    all in all a good job, and what a :swear:ing toaster
     
  3. Net Jockey

    Net Jockey Geek Trainee

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    I can not take credit for writing it...LOL...I posted it to have some fun.
     
  4. Net Jockey

    Net Jockey Geek Trainee

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    Lovely sense of HA,Ha...everyone.:confused:
     
  5. donkey42

    donkey42 plank

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    credit where credit is due, you posted it

    BTW: bl00dy funny
     
  6. DaRuSsIaMaN

    DaRuSsIaMaN Geek Comrade

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    Haha, wow...
    I only got a chance to read it now. Where does this come from?
     
  7. Net Jockey

    Net Jockey Geek Trainee

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    I have a friend who has many friends who send him all kinds of stuff... which he passes on to me. This was one of them. Sorry I do not know it's origin.
     
  8. DaRuSsIaMaN

    DaRuSsIaMaN Geek Comrade

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    I feel sorry for that engineer. He will probably feel rather frustrated after that toaster undoubtedly fails.
     
  9. Swansen

    Swansen The Ninj

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    so, i was just thinking about it, and i know a toaster in only on for like a minute, but wouldn't it be a lot better to use a quartz crystal, than a filament?
     
  10. donkey42

    donkey42 plank

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    plank, quartz crystals are usually in watches, so, i'd make a good as part timer for the toaster
     
  11. Swansen

    Swansen The Ninj

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  12. donkey42

    donkey42 plank

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  13. Swansen

    Swansen The Ninj

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    LOL, its all good
     

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