Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Monday, April 21, 2025

Whiners vs. Problem Solvers

Recently I read a post on LinkedIn that seems to be going viral about the high cost of dice for board games due to the tariffs imposed on goods from China. The post talks about how the company has looked to source dice from other parts of the world but can't find any companies outside of China. As a result, they will have to pass on the added costs to their customers so that a $40 board game will now cost $60. I apologize for not having more details but the post bothered me because it sounded more like whining than someone looking for a solution. I don't like listening to whiners.

I immediately started engineering solutions for the problem and thought about what I would do in the same situation. As someone with a 3D printer, my immediate thought involved a minor investment in high-quality printers capable of churning out all the necessary dice required to meet with game demands. While my current printer might not be up to the challenge, there are a number of models that are and it struck me as very unimaginative to whine about not being able to manufacture dice. 3D printing is what a lot of Dungeons and Dragons (D&D) players do when they want to create their own multi-sided dice. Couldn't that work for a board game company?

Then I thought about other possible solutions. Ultimately there is nothing like physically rolling high-quality dice while playing a game. Perhaps until a dice manufacturer can be found the company could provide a smartphone application that simulates the roll of the dice. There are a number of existing apps already and so it wouldn't be that difficult to replace physical dice. While most of us think of standard 6-sided dice, D&D players require many different sided dice and resort to these types of apps when physical dice aren't available.

I'm sure there are even more possible solutions that this board-game manufacturer could employ. Yes these tariffs are going to be painful. But I see the pain as short-term as we shift some of our manufacturing back to the United States after spending the past several decades shipping it out. Fortunately my experience has taught me that growth only comes through trials and in the end it is worth it.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Broken Electronics

This weeks has been a bad week for electronics in our family. The only problem with owning something is that you get used to it and really hate it when it breaks.

Yesterday I got a call from my son down at college and he was pretty upset. He had been cleaning the screen on his relatively new Sony Xperia Z phone when it cracked right down the middle. When that happens, the touch screen no longer works and the phone is almost useless. He was only able to call me because he has a smart watch linked to his phone and could use the watch to interface with the phone. As long as the number he wants to call is in his phone's address book, he can make calls. He can also receive calls through the watch.

To add insult to injury, the power supply on my son's 40-inch Samsung TV went out on Saturday. There was the Bronco's game on last night that my son's room mates wanted to watch but couldn't because of the broken TV. They were giving him grief over it and my son was pretty bummed. Never mind that the TV was a free gift from someone at work and none of my son's other room mates had a TV.

My wife and I got done consoling my son when my daughter called and complained that her MacBook's charger had died. She is using a room mate's to charge her computer for now. This is the second time her charger has failed.

There are solutions to all of these problems but it is tough to deal with them all at the same time. Furthermore, Three of the major electronics brands are represented in this week's failures. Guess what they all have in common? Every single one of the failed parts was made by the same company in China. We really need to find another source for our electronic products as this is not the first time I have written about Chinese crap failing.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Chinese Crap

I had hoped to write something here last week but got stuck late at work every night. Just when we were ready to go live with a new release of some software hosted on our new hardware infrastructure, we lost one of our networking switches and had to delay. It is probably a good thing as waiting to replace our hardware gave us time to fix some configuration issues with our software. However it was really frustrating to have everything ready to go, only to have quality issues because one of our vendors decided to move all manufacturing to China. It seems like I am seeing an astronomical failure rate for products made in China.

Unfortunately it is impossible to buy anything these days that isn't made in China. If you want the best price for computers and electronics, you can bet that a lot of the components come from there. I have decided that I can no longer afford to blindly purchase goods. The first question I ask myself before purchasing a product is, "Where is it made?" If the answer is China, then I look around for the next 2 or 3 competing products. If they are also made in China, then I don't really have much of a choice. If they are made somewhere else, then there better be a significant price break or I will buy the competitor. In fact, I would much rather purchase a bicycle built in the USA than an automobile built in China. Trust me when I tell you that you will get more miles out of the bike than the car.