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Technology Stocks : TAVA Technologies (TAVA-NASDAQ) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: C.K. Houston who wrote (11328)2/15/1998 12:36:00 AM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 31646
 
Someone please tell me I'm not the first to find this about TAVA:

208.224.199.40

- Jeff



To: C.K. Houston who wrote (11328)2/15/1998 12:47:00 AM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 31646
 
FYI, TAVA alliance partner VentureTech 2000 paid VXTK (Veronex Technologies) $2.5M to license their I/Nova Y2K software: biz.yahoo.com

I wonder what they paid TAVA to license Plant Y2KOne?

- Jeff



To: C.K. Houston who wrote (11328)2/17/1998 9:28:00 AM
From: Jim Wilke  Respond to of 31646
 
I think you are reading way too deep into this issue, have missed the most basic facts.

While the front office is concerned with systems integration for new and existing manufacturing processes, and uses current technology in the application, is is the factory floor that experiences all the problems of making things work in the real world. After I, as a design engineer, produce a design in my "front office", I also go out to the factory floor (so to speak) during construction to verify that things go well. I learn lessons from systems that work and those that do not work. These lessons are then applied to subsequent work top increase my efficiency. Not all front office workers care about their projects once they are transferred into the next phase of development - and this applies even in my office.

In TAVA's case, going to the factory floor has apparently meant that the embedded y2k issue was undoubtedly taken seriously early on in this company's history, and the encountered y2k problems were cataloged, not simply discarded after each project was completed. Thus the data base was born, and grew.

Thus, as Jenkins alluded, lessons learned from the factory floor, in this company, have been integrated into an important aspect of TAVA's on-going business.

Respectfully, Jim