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How a Subscription Video Service Uses Data + Smart Marketing to Retain Customers

Being a Subscription Video On Demand (SVoD) service, subscribers are the lifeblood of our business. And as we are still, very much, the...

Improving the toughness of graphene films

Apr 09, 2020 (Nanowerk Spotlight) Graphene films with high toughness, strength and electrical conductivity have many promising applications as lightweight structural materials for...

Entertainment during COVID-19: How esports is filling a void

Entertainment during COVID-19: How esports is filling a void

The debate over whether esports are “real sports” has been ongoing for years. But no one ever asked: what if esports are the only sports?
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The Daily Californian

COVID-19 Crisis Will Likely Disproportionately Affect the Health and Finances of Communities of Color

The COVID-19 outbreak will likely disproportionately affect communities of color in both their health and their pocketbooks, compounding longstanding racial disparities in health...

Poll: 4 in 10 Americans Report Losing Their Jobs or Work-Related Income Due to the Coronavirus Crisis, Including More Than Half of Part-Time Workers

Americans, Regardless of Partisan Identity, Prioritize Slowing Coronavirus’ Spread over Restarting the Economy With coronavirus cases rising and businesses shutting down, four in 10...

How creative director Arthur Lewis built a dynamic collection of black art

Written by Essence Harden This article was published in partnership with Artsy, the global platform for discovering and collecting art. The original article can...

The 1960s symbol we need more than ever before

Written by Kate Silzer This article was published in partnership with Artsy, the global platform for discovering and collecting art. The original article can...

Merchant Account vs. PSP vs. Payment Gateway: A side by side comparison

Perhaps there is no better way than a side-by-side comparison with a list of pre-defined features and components. And this is exactly how...

How Fundraising Organizers Can Support Local Restaurants

It’s essential to support local restaurants right now. It’s no secret that restaurants and small businesses are hurting, along with the thousands of...

How to Debug a Node.js Application: Tips, Tricks and Tools

Software development is complex and, at some point, your Node.js application will fail. If you’re lucky, your code will crash with an obvious...

Time for a Supply Chain Reserve Corps

As I am sure every supply chain professional and logistician is doing now, I am spending quite a bit of time thinking about the overall supply chain in the United States and wondering if it is truly set up to service the Country in a time of national emergency.  We heard the Governor of NY today in his press conference say that the states are basically bidding against each other to get needed (and scarce) health care supplies.  Rather than going where they are most needed they appear to be going to the highest bidder.

We have also heard the President tell the states this is substantially a state problem and the feds are there to help and backstop.  Finally, we are hearing about the shear lack of ventilators and hospital beds when (just a few weeks ago it was "should") a pandemic hit the United States.  All of this makes me wonder if this is truly the best way to deal with a national emergency.


By now many of you have also seen the incredible Ted talk Bill Gates gave back in 2015 where he essentially predicted this COVID-19 outbreak.  While not predicting this one in particular, Mr. Gates did say something like this would happen.  I highly encourage you to watch this:


Here are some key points from the talk (March of 2015):
  1. The next big crisis will be from "microbes" not "missiles".
     
  2. We have insulated ourselves from huge war catastrophes (i.e. a nuclear war or another world war) because we have spent a trillion dollars plus on national defense and the infrastructure required to defend the United States.
  3. We have a military which can scale up dramatically in a short time to fight or deter a war.
  4. We should model our fight against microbes after the structure of the military.  You have a permanent "active" force and you have a large "reserve" force which can be called up and which actively practices, trains. and stays functional. 
When I saw him say this I was absolutely floored.  When I was in the Army in Germany we used to practice going to our "General Defensive Position (GDP)" and we would periodically go visit the warehouses set up all over Europe with stockpiles of tanks, trucks etc.  We would start them up, move them, practice deploying them etc. and we would do that in conjunction with our reserve forces.  We called it "REFORGER" which stood for "Return of Forces to Germany".  It was all a preparation for scaling up the military in Germany to over 1 million soldiers if the war started.  Similiar exercises were done in Korea and other places.

So, the question I am thinking about now is if it is time to have a "Reserve Supply Chain Force"?  This would be something you would sign up for just like the military reserves.  You would have a role / rank, you would go and practice once a month on the weekend, you would do a 2 week summer training and you would be available to be called up if the government activated the reserves.  We would have needs for coordination with civilian industry, you would run a huge reserve of trucks, trailers and drivers and you would work for a leader of this organization.

If your civilian job was in an "Essential industry or company" you may get activated but stay embedded in that company to coordinate all the work.

There are a lot of details to work out but perhaps we need this force that can work in the complex civilian world of supply chain and tie it to the needs of a pandemic so we can scale up the supply chain and distribution / logistics network very quickly.  What would this accomplish:
  1. It would allow us to scale up almost instantaneously.  Get the expertise in place, get the trucks / trailers along with drivers and immediately establish the infrastructure for leadership.
  2. It would prioritize the loading of the nation's supply chain after huge "air in the pipe" is created (Think the run on TP).  This could be done in conjunction with FEMA.
  3. It would allow us to train so we are ready right away.  By being trained we don't take months to just figure out "how things work".
  4. Finally, it would establish a professional "corps" which is qualified, ready and willing to get called up as needed. 
In the end, we have the model on how to build an infrastructure to fight a huge event which comes up on us like a black swan.  The model is the military and the reserves.  We should follow it.  Perhaps CSCMP can help with this and build out the model.  

The Imaginary, Symbolic, and the Real

by Dillon Vetere (aka Safehouse) The 2010’s have come to an end, and there was no better way to end the decade with a collection...

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