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#ferrari#pit#checklists#learn#transfer#tifosi#article#staff#team#race

Discussion (48 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
I'm a tifosi. But what a poor choice of F1 team to learn from successful, coordinated, well and timely executed pit stops.
Like one of those big banners they hold up at football (soccer) matches?
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Pit+Stop+Felipe...
As a die-hard Schumacher fan, I really wanted to see Massa take the title that year, so it was heartbreaking. And yet, I can't help but laugh every time I see the Ferrari crew looking so dejected, carrying that fuel hose back to the garage like a defeated army.
I suppose we shouldn't apply this "Ferrari system" to medical surgery—unless the patient is prepared to have their aorta dragged out along with the equipment.
- S-stay out, stay out.
I first thought it’d be a “I’m 18+ pop-up” lol.
I am an electrical engineer. Can I be invited to some eCar races pits to learn common sense too?
>The receiving doctor used an information transfer aide memoire, a form or checklist specifically designed for this process, to prompt and record the transfer of the appropriate information. Once all the blanks on the form were filled (or discussed where missing), the form was placed in the patient’s notes and acted as the admission note to the ICU, saving everyone time.
if additional forms and checklists save lives, then by all means. I have doubts though. New processes, forms and checklists have high cost, taking additional time and attention resources. If it is an optimization of an already existing process or if the staff have extra amount of their resources to spare then great, otherwise it should come from somewhere. From the same probably already overworked staff. Who as a result would probably shortcut something at some other place. I mean they identified bad transfer of info and less than ideal preparedness of the receiving bed at ICU as the root causes. What was the root cause that the trained staff did such bad info transfer and unpreparedness though? Just a lack of a process/forms/checklists?
Btw, a glaring absence of AI who could have performed necessary forms and checklists data collection and completion. And similar to codegen, the AI could have produced the plan of transfer and monitor the execution of the transfer steps by the "human agents" (using vision, sensors and RFID badges and tags on humans and equipment, etc.) In that respect the article looks like a medieval text on medicine :)
Checklists are worse than useless if they are slow and not relevant.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43957231
Truth be told, Ferrari don't have normal customers. All of them have to be extremely rich. Even then, they get treated as if they are 'tractor company owners' and not worthy. The F1 team has hundreds of people for running two cars, with those cars needing to drive no more than two hours at a time, with no need for the cars to last more than one season, at a cost of many millions.
Compare with the hospitality sector, where customers come from all walks of life, from all over the world. Money has to be made rather than just spent. Rarely is anyone kept waiting (in a decent hotel) and the customer has to come first, at all cost. There are handovers and checklists, which are no big deal.
From my experience of various hospital stays, where waiting is glacial, I honestly believe that just a little bit of 'customer first' attitude would be helpful. Just a few staff that have experience from the real world of hospitality would make a difference, and I just don't see the F1 people having the basic skills, even if they can do high-octane pitstops in seconds.
It's done to keep things that require some level of training or discretion in their use away from the general public. Which I definitely understand. But it's still silly. And restricts some stuff unnecessarily. For example, there's an amazing fast epoxy, nothing weird about it, that you simply can't buy without jumping through stupid hoops. They'd make bank selling that stuff to the general industrial market, it performs better than the big boys' best a lot of the time. But... good luck buying it.
Their race strategy has been sabotaging drivers for YEARS.
TIL, I am a health professional on the internet. If you need help with any health problems I am here. /s