Archive for the ‘Learn Master Piano’ Category

Learn & Master Piano DVDs


2010
05.22

Piano Learning System - Order Now

Shared Piano Parts


2010
01.08

As in many engineered products, a large number of parts compose a piano. Executives at Korg Italy Spa of Milan, Italy, which makes electronic keyboards and digital pianos, recently found they needed a new way to manage components.

Each Korg product contains anywhere from 300 and 1,000 components, some off the shelf, some customized. So when managers wanted to optimize the entire product-development and part-management process, they faced no small undertaking, said Franco Ripa, hardware development manager at Korg Italy.

Ripa and his colleagues were looking for a product lifecycle management system that would let them manage parallel projects and share information in-house and with outside suppliers.

The company recently brought in a PLM system from think3 of Milan, Italy, that lets engineers do just that. Korg also implemented a Web interface feature, which allows distributors to order spare parts in real time. The reseller sees the object, places it in the trolley with the price shown, and the order is processed automatically at Korg, Ripa said. This new system has cut from three to one the number of employees needed to oversee the spare-parts system

The company has now moved to the next phase of the PLM project: the exchange of parts lists with China, Ripa said.

At Korg, product engineering is done in Italy, and two facilities in China handle production.

“At present we transfer the lists manually on Excel spreadsheets, which take a considerable time to draft and check,” Ripa said. “Our objective is to ensure that our parts list is automatically present on the Chinese management system. This will enable considerable savings in the time and resources needed to manage the lists and reduce the amount of human error present in the current system.”

A Piano Man Learns To Love Himself


2010
01.07

At the risk of sounding self-absorbed, Rufus Wainwright says he half-jokingly dedicated his new album, Want One, to himself. “I was not necessarily falling in love with myself,” he explains, “but trying to learn how to love myself.”

Turns out that, for the last few years, the 30-year-old Montreal-raised son of folksingers Kate McGarrigle and Loudon Wainwright III has been a tad self-destructive.

But last year he went to rehab for drug and alcohol abuse. And the consummate New York party boy also claims to be focusing more on what’s really important to him. “After 9/11 and the war in Iraq, I felt, ‘You better get all your stuff out now before it’s closing time.’” He recorded 30 songs and plans to release Want Two next spring.

Wainwright admits that he’d also like more than just critical acclaim before it’s all over. “I want to get Want into Wal-Mart,” he says. “I’m walking on a lot of thin ice, in terms of being gay and singing about drug use and adult subject matter. So I’m trying to be tactful, considering the innately puritanical nature of the United States.”

Even with his attempts to bury themes that might make Americans nervous, Wainwright has made an intensely personal album with raw cries for help and depictions of his turbulent relationship with his father. And it’s all done in his unique piano, operatic, cabaret pop style. Call it the music of self-actualization — getting clean has rarely sounded so pretty.