pl tell what wanderlust implies in six sigma
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accrington.
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March 26, 2007 at 10:20 am #46523
pl tell what wanderlust implies in six sigma.. regards
0March 26, 2007 at 3:39 pm #153959
Heebeegeebee BBParticipant@Heebeegeebee-BBInclude @Heebeegeebee-BB in your post and this person will
be notified via email.This should be good…
Popcorn’s ready.0March 26, 2007 at 4:11 pm #153962wander – to roll, to move about aimlessly or without any destination, often in search of food or employment.
lust – to crave: have a craving, appetite, or great desire for
Soooooo …..wanderlust in six sigma would have to mean someone who has a great desire to move about aimlessly in search of employment so that you will have money to by things like popcorn. (see random walk)
….Heebeegeebee BB, if it’s salted and buttered I take some now……0March 26, 2007 at 4:51 pm #153964
WanderlustMember@WanderlustInclude @Wanderlust in your post and this person will
be notified via email.Jee, Six Sigma is quite inventive in appropriating even the arcanest of all terms. Now it’s “Wanderlust”. In the Middle Ages, German apprentices had to work at various locations of a guild association in order to become certified as a Meister (Master). The “Wanderjahre” (the years spend travelling and working) were ended at the point of origin with the certification as a “Meister”. During the 19th century “Auf Wanderlust sein” became a romantic way of demonstrating one’s liberal aspiration for German Unification (which then occurred in 1871 under less liberal circumstances). Wandern is not associated with aimlessness or lack of destination. Wandern always requires a “Wandertour”, i.e. the Wanderer ends up where he started. It’s also not a random walk, and it definitely does not require popcorn. clb1, your research skills suck :-).
0March 26, 2007 at 4:59 pm #153965Nothing
0March 26, 2007 at 5:26 pm #153968
WanderlustMember@WanderlustInclude @Wanderlust in your post and this person will
be notified via email.Britw,
Wanderslust is a critical part of the certification process in a multi-divisional corporation where “candidates” get transferred from one division to another as part of their project completion. This results in the highly prestigious “Six Sigma Wanderlust Certification”.0March 26, 2007 at 5:50 pm #153969ok
0March 26, 2007 at 6:18 pm #153971
Heebeegeebee BBParticipant@Heebeegeebee-BBInclude @Heebeegeebee-BB in your post and this person will
be notified via email.Salted and double-buttered!
0March 26, 2007 at 10:43 pm #153994Speaking of Pl, nect time use a capital L…I thought someone was dissing PI for awhile. Noone messes with PI!
0March 28, 2007 at 11:25 am #154086
accringtonParticipant@accringtonInclude @accrington in your post and this person will
be notified via email.Just checking. You’re not Mr AllthingsIdiot (O) with a new nom de plume are you? The reason I ask is that ‘div’ is a slang term used in the city of Liverpool. The definition is pasted below:
div
Noun. An idiot, a pitiable person, a contemptible person. Cf. ‘divvy’0 -
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