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J**T
not seeing what all the fuss is about
This is a nice book exercising your imagination in solving problems, but as a claim to be a general method for inventiveness, not so persuasive. You might find some of the checklist ways of looking at problems to be helpful when a situation stumps you. More of a warm up and practice book than a master class.
G**1
And Suddenly the Inventor Appeared: TRIZ, the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving
Unfortunately I did not enjoy this book to the extent that other readers have. The subject of TRIZ (The Russian acronym for the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving) is quite fascinating, and I look forward to learning more. It was my opinion that since this book was written by the man who developed this idea, that it would be my best source for learning the material.What I found was that a number of the solutions presented were either wrong by my experience, or would not be practical to implement in most situations. It is possible that things were lost in translation from the original Russian version of the book to the English version.What disturbed me the most is that it seemed the author was talking down to his readers; this too may have been due to translation. As a result, I found this book very difficult to read, and is not one I would personally recommend.
D**R
A good introduction to TRIZ, but not the best synthesis of knowledge
The book starts with good examples, and is definitely interesting to read. However, I am not convinced by the way Genrikh Altshuller has synthesized his experience and knowledge. The contents of the book can definitely transform a good inventor to a better inventor, but that's about it. The claims and propganda about TRIZ on the world wide web are far mor exaggerated, as a reader with critical thinking skills (aka reading with open mind) will quickly realize after reading this book.
N**E
MUST read for innovative engineers
And Suddenly the Inventor Appeared- it is exceptionally good book for reading & practicing. It can be read by a curious person of any age.written in so simple way that it can be read as a story book.This book imparts total new vision about creative problem solving by TRIZ methods.though this is an introductory book, it has great potential to stimulate thinking process for technical problem solving.100% recomended for a person trying to learn TRIZ techniques for Engineering problem solving
D**R
Practical with real world examples
An excellent collection of real problems and their innovative solution. This is not one of those books that have loads of fluffy high level creativity nonsense (self evident truisms). This book goes straight to the point and describes real life problems and how the TRIZ is used to solve them. Very good book for designers, engineers or entrepreneurs.
J**H
Flashback
This book made TRIZ fun and interesting because of the stories it used to provide application advice. Made me feel like I was back in school working on word problems.
W**.
Great book for inventors!
I'm a long time inventor and product developer. This book presents new ideas on how to be a creative inventor, and that is a wonderful thing when you're trying to develop the simplest, cheapest solution to a problem. We can never have too many aids to stimulate our thinking!
B**N
Useful book
This book has some great insight into problem solving.
M**O
ottimo
Libro perfetto, usato, arrivato nei tempi ed in ottime condizioni. soddisfatto.
R**O
Interesting and profound
Very interesting material, with easy to follow explanation. However the content itself is quite profund, so the reader needs to take its time to understand the subtleties behind every sentence.
C**I
good starting point for TRIZ beginner
the book describes the steps of TRIZ methodology. it is a good starting point for beginners in this field of innovation.
C**N
Le livre était en parfait état, alors que c'était une occasion
Ce livre me sert pour élaborer un cours sur la méthode TRIZ, j'y ai déjà découvert quelques perles bien utiles.
C**E
Rubbish
This book was mentioned in an article I was reading and it spurred me on to read it and find out a bit more about TRIZ. It purports to provide a generic method or methods for finding solutions to universal problems. Sadly it doesn't do this at all.It was written with high school students in mind and I read it within this context. The author (during his work and his subsequent 25-year sentence spent in a concentration camp in Siberia) suggests that solutions to problems can be found by studying his methods and applying his process. His methods have been extracted from studying numerous engineering patents, or so you think at first. Until you realise that they're not 'real' international patents but 'Author's Certificates' issued to inventors during the Soviet era and within the Soviet Union.Further reading reveals that all the problems studied are physical/mechanical problems to which a number of solutions appear to be solved by using ferromagetic powder and applying a magnetic field. Convenient that so many problems have this same solution. After a while, the reader realises that what the author has done is study a number of physical/mechanical problems and their solutions, categorise the solutions into buckets of ideas, then present those ideas as a 'method' for solving a similar problem. It is a worthy goal to try and find if there are universal patterns to finding solutions to problems but the author's 'work' is nowhere near this.For example, method #11 (and my favourite by the way) is "Add magnetic powder to the substance and apply a magnetic field". Brilliant. I look forware to finding solutions to my software engineering problems with that. Or perhaps I might try method #23 "Utilization of soap bubbles and foam".Later on, the author introduces his 'S-field' method for analyzing problems, using various straight and dashed lines with arrowheads to denote fields and how they interact with one another. Yes we know that there are a number of different 'fields' in Physics, magnetic, electric, gravitational and so on, and the author uses his expert knowledge (or pseudo-science more like) of these fields to lend credence to these ideas. No this is not a new methology but the ramblings of a nut case who's spent too much time in Siberia.One might accept all this if it were only intended as a book for school kids but the preface to the book mentions how TRIZ followers wish to set up an Altshuller Institute in America (this was 20 years ago of course), the very idea that this book offers anything of any use to any professional engineer, scientist or inventor is deluded. And the word 'follower' is apt, suggesting a cult more than a scientific methodology.Perhaps this book belongs in the 1950s Soviet era when the bulk of the 'work' was done. It shouldn't really be in print anymore so please save yourself the money that I paid to read this book. It's not worth it.
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