What constitutes an acceptable naming convention for traceability?

Do whatever you want in whatever manner you want, nobodies business but yours and you can tell whoever doesn't like it..."Bite Me!"

Just control the process and make sure others that need to know can tell the difference between what's what.

There are more important things to worry about like lunch, the winner of the Daytona 500, and Where's Waldo.
 
Do whatever you want in whatever manner you want, nobodies business but yours and you can tell whoever doesn't like it..."Bite Me!"

Just control the process and make sure others that need to know can tell the difference between what's what.

There are more important things to worry about like lunch, the winner of the Daytona 500, and Where's Waldo.
Especially the Daytona 500! :agree1:
 
@BParker what is your role? It isn’t clear in your ‘about’ section. Are you asking this as an internal auditor or as an external auditor? Are you asking this as a consultant? Are you asking this as a Quality manager over your organization’s QMS?

The best answer depends on your role…
 
@BParker what is your role? It isn’t clear in your ‘about’ section. Are you asking this as an internal auditor or as an external auditor? Are you asking this as a consultant? Are you asking this as a Quality manager over your organization’s QMS?

The best answer depends on your role…
Quality Manager, over QMS, and internal audit functions.
 
Kyle is due for sure. No denying Christopher Bell at any track.
You're right and KB helped mentor him early on. We've a ton of hungry new kids out there for sure. As for me? I want and hope to see KB win 1 more Cup, and the 500 before he retires which will be sooner than we think. I became a fan after he left Hendricks and haven't faltered, bad attitude or not. I've had the privilege of working with different folks with different teams in the past (doing this ISO junk) and they're all great in my book.
 
Do whatever you want in whatever manner you want, nobodies business but yours and you can tell whoever doesn't like it..."Bite Me!"

Just control the process and make sure others that need to know can tell the difference between what's what.

There are more important things to worry about like lunch, the winner of the Daytona 500, and Where's Waldo.
Today, February 18, 2026 marks the 25th anniversary of the death of legend Dale Earnhardt Senior from injuries suffered during a crash in the final lap of the Daytona 500. Just thought you might like to know......
 
You're right and KB helped mentor him early on. We've a ton of hungry new kids out there for sure. As for me? I want and hope to see KB win 1 more Cup, and the 500 before he retires which will be sooner than we think. I became a fan after he left Hendricks and haven't faltered, bad attitude or not. I've had the privilege of working with different folks with different teams in the past (doing this ISO junk) and they're all great in my book.
On my bucket list is seeing either a NASCAR or Indy Race. What kind of budget am I looking at for that?
 
On my bucket list is seeing either a NASCAR or Indy Race. What kind of budget am I looking at for that?
It really depends on what race you want to go to. I don't know for NASCAR, but my brother used to be a mechanical engineer for one of the Indycar racing teams for a bit before moving on to F1. Long Beach Grand Prix was one of my favorite races to go to. I haven't been to a race in years, but from a quick search tickets look to be around $250-500 for a three day pass depending on what section you want to be in. You can add a pit pass for an extra $150-200. Hotels will be expensive (probably $500-$700 per night). The Indy 500 is a great race too and is actually less expensive than Long Beach. Long Beach being a street race is a very different experience than a track race. F1 races are another story. Those are ridiculously expensive. Last rumor I heard for a race like Las Vegas tickets start at $1000.

You'll want to get tickets as early as you can as they sell out quickly.
 
Back
Top Bottom