From the Editor March 2021

General

In 1846, Scientific American magazine said in regards to boat propellers that “It is truly astonishing that men of capital in England…suppose that a propeller of any form on the screw principle can compete with the simple Fultonian paddle-wheel.” In 2020, the magazine pointed out that the writer had missed the fact that as a ship rolls, more of one side of the paddle is submerged, which causes an unbalanced power output. The resulting steering problem is just one reason for the lack today of paddle-wheel aircraft carriers.

Everyone makes mistakes which is probably why the saying “Only those who do nothing can go through life and never make a mistake” is attributed to so many different sources. Mistakes are part of learning and you shouldn’t fear making a mistake. What you should fear is failing to learn from those mistakes.

And some mistakes turn out for the better – super glue, the Slinky, the pacemaker, penicillin, microwave ovens, x-rays and ink-jet printers. Which just goes to show that ‘mistake’ and ‘opportunity’ could be metaphors.

Publishing Information
Page Number:
1
Related Articles
Inside the workplaces going the extra mile for apprentices
When Sean Martin talks about apprenticeship training, he speaks from lived experience - and that perspective is exactly why he’s such a strong advocate for getting it right. Now Service Supervisor at...
ScheduleHub brings discipline and control to complex compliance management
New Zealand enterprise data management company, WaterOutlook, has launched ScheduleHub a compliance scheduling platform. The first of its kind, ScheduleHub enables water authorities and other highly...
element14 Podcast Explores AI, Brain Science and the Next Frontier of Human-Centred Innovation
element14's Top Tech Voices podcast continues its second season with two new episodes exploring how neuroscience, AI and health technology are reshaping the way people think, behave and live. The...