the hardware OS: operating discipline for programs — how requirements, decisions, and risk stay grounded in what build shows.

Prijzen vanaf
17,59

Uitgelicht

VERGELIJK ALLE AANBIEDERS (3)

Beschrijving

Bol The drift is obvious. The diagnosis is harder.The thermal limit changes again. Mechanical already cut metal to last week's number. Electrical has a test trace that says the old number was optimistic. The supplier never got the last revision. The program manager is holding a date someone already showed a paying customer. Everyone is working. Nobody is slacking. The program is still drifting.What is almost always missing is a manual for the process: no agreed way for work to cross team lines, no shared rule for what "locked" means when new data shows up, no honest tie between the schedule and what test actually measured, and no single page where that story stays true long enough to survive the next status call.Most programs respond by adding a tool. Sprints. Jira. More Jira. Six months later the same program is behind the same way - because the failure is upstream of the software: unowned decisions, numbers nobody committed to, schedules built on optimism instead of lead times.The Hardware OS is that missing manual. It names the failure modes precisely and gives you the control for each one: - Requirements that stay grounded in physics and evidence - not stacked buffers nobody can trace. - Decisions that stay recorded, each with a named owner and a date. - Risk you can actually read, tied to what the build and test show. - Schedules computed from real dependencies - not a launch date defended by narrative until two weeks before it slips. - Executive truth: a one-page status your sponsor can trust without holding the whole program in their head. It is written engineer-to-engineer, by someone who has run these programs. Short chapters, plain words, lightweight enough to actually run, and transferable to the next program. When it is working, your exec can leave on Friday without a Saturday phone call, your PM stops asking "where are we?", and your team spends its time on the technical problem instead of reconciling slides against the test floor.It is not a compliance framework, and it does not replace your safety lifecycle, your design history file, or specialist depth. It is the coordination layer that sits underneath them - the thing that keeps your team from running on fiction while that work gets done.For engineering leads, systems engineers, technical program managers, and hardware founders running real programs.Stop re-deciding what was already decided. Write the right things down, name who owns them, and get back to the design.

Vergelijk aanbieders (3)

Shop
Prijs
Verzendkosten
Totale prijs
17,59
2,99
20,58
Naar shop
2,99 Shipping Costs
18,65
Gratis
18,65
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
18,65
Gratis
18,65
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
Beschrijving (2)
Bol

The drift is obvious. The diagnosis is harder.The thermal limit changes again. Mechanical already cut metal to last week's number. Electrical has a test trace that says the old number was optimistic. The supplier never got the last revision. The program manager is holding a date someone already showed a paying customer. Everyone is working. Nobody is slacking. The program is still drifting.What is almost always missing is a manual for the process: no agreed way for work to cross team lines, no shared rule for what "locked" means when new data shows up, no honest tie between the schedule and what test actually measured, and no single page where that story stays true long enough to survive the next status call.Most programs respond by adding a tool. Sprints. Jira. More Jira. Six months later the same program is behind the same way - because the failure is upstream of the software: unowned decisions, numbers nobody committed to, schedules built on optimism instead of lead times.The Hardware OS is that missing manual. It names the failure modes precisely and gives you the control for each one: - Requirements that stay grounded in physics and evidence - not stacked buffers nobody can trace. - Decisions that stay recorded, each with a named owner and a date. - Risk you can actually read, tied to what the build and test show. - Schedules computed from real dependencies - not a launch date defended by narrative until two weeks before it slips. - Executive truth: a one-page status your sponsor can trust without holding the whole program in their head. It is written engineer-to-engineer, by someone who has run these programs. Short chapters, plain words, lightweight enough to actually run, and transferable to the next program. When it is working, your exec can leave on Friday without a Saturday phone call, your PM stops asking "where are we?", and your team spends its time on the technical problem instead of reconciling slides against the test floor.It is not a compliance framework, and it does not replace your safety lifecycle, your design history file, or specialist depth. It is the coordination layer that sits underneath them - the thing that keeps your team from running on fiction while that work gets done.For engineering leads, systems engineers, technical program managers, and hardware founders running real programs.Stop re-deciding what was already decided. Write the right things down, name who owns them, and get back to the design.

Amazon

Pagina's: 142, Paperback, Hardware OS Press


Productspecificaties

Merk Hardware OS Press
EAN
  • 9798996729203
Maat


Prijshistorie

* Prijshistorie bevat geen data van Amazon, Amazon Marketplace.

Prijzen voor het laatst bijgewerkt op:

Uitgelichte Keuze
17,59
Naar shop