Great video Paul, thank you so much. Could you make a vídeo explaining how to prepare a data collection plan please? Again thank you and Greetings from México
I guess Im asking randomly but does anybody know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account?? I somehow forgot the account password. I love any tricks you can give me.
@Jared Robert Thanks for your reply. I got to the site through google and im trying it out atm. I see it takes a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
How do you know that in L12 you can test what the 7 variables do?... Is there a special way to know that? An "equation" for example?, and if it is so, what equation is this?
Karim - what a great question. The L12 is an orthogonal pattern, that is what you're looking for in a test. Because orthogonality is a repeatable idea, we have these standard orthogonal patterns that we trust to do the job...
Could someone clarify what the four columns are in the four tables in 12:00? There are 7 variables and 2 levels each, what are the Rep1 through Rep4 representing in these tables representing the 4 noise conditions? Thanks so much for the help in advance!
Hi Pei - the 4 columns are are 4 sample measurements taken at that setting for that component on the board. We tested 4 types of component and measured 4 of those components each time...
Hi Paul, Thank you so much for the response, really appreciate it. Do you mean they are measurements of the same setups from four different boards or on the same board? And what’s the reason that you’re choosing to measure four times specifically? Thank you
@@feiputw83 - you need a good sample size, usually between 30 and 50. If we conduct 12 set ups and measure 4 boards we get 48 data points a perfect sample size..
Hi Paul, I am a Master's student in Hospitality Management your videos helped me a lot. Keep making videos. Support from Philippines
Thanks, will do!
Gem of a channel🙌
Cheers...
why L12? Why not L9 or other L .... Thanks Paul Great Videos
Great video! Thank you for what you are doing!
Glad you enjoy it! I'll keep them coming...
I bought your book!,, Amazon,, good work my friend
Edgar - Many thanks for your support, let me know if you need any extra help or if you spot a typo in there!
excellent video,was very helpful
Glad to hear that Jose, let me know if you want a special subject covering....
good teacher. better than my teacher in nus
Cheers Edgar....
great explanation!
Glad you think so! Thanks
Great video Paul, thank you so much. Could you make a vídeo explaining how to prepare a data collection plan please?
Again thank you and Greetings from México
Jorge - Do you mean a control plan or a data collection plan?
@@paulallen5321 I meant data collection plan, During define phase.
Thank you Paul, Greetings
I guess Im asking randomly but does anybody know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account??
I somehow forgot the account password. I love any tricks you can give me.
@Javion Cohen Instablaster =)
@Jared Robert Thanks for your reply. I got to the site through google and im trying it out atm.
I see it takes a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
How do you know that in L12 you can test what the 7 variables do?... Is there a special way to know that? An "equation" for example?, and if it is so, what equation is this?
Karim - what a great question. The L12 is an orthogonal pattern, that is what you're looking for in a test. Because orthogonality is a repeatable idea, we have these standard orthogonal patterns that we trust to do the job...
Valuable ❤️
Glad you like it...
Could someone clarify what the four columns are in the four tables in 12:00? There are 7 variables and 2 levels each, what are the Rep1 through Rep4 representing in these tables representing the 4 noise conditions? Thanks so much for the help in advance!
Hi Pei - the 4 columns are are 4 sample measurements taken at that setting for that component on the board. We tested 4 types of component and measured 4 of those components each time...
Hi Paul, Thank you so much for the response, really appreciate it. Do you mean they are measurements of the same setups from four different boards or on the same board? And what’s the reason that you’re choosing to measure four times specifically? Thank you
@@feiputw83 - you need a good sample size, usually between 30 and 50. If we conduct 12 set ups and measure 4 boards we get 48 data points a perfect sample size..
@@paulallen5321 Understood, thank you so much for the answers and videos!!
Great stuff Mr Allen, mind if we have a chat?
Artemio - Great to hear from you, more than happy to chat and help if I can. My e-mail address is paul.allen@allenp.co.uk and we'll arrange something