The Value of Vintage – by Matt Pathmajeyan

August 14th, 2009

1972-fender

Lately I’ve been captivated with vintage music equipment. As I expand my limited collection, I’ve come to understand that certain equipment, such as amplifiers, were built better before we learned how to integrate everything into a computer chip. What is it that accounts for this gap in quality? In the 80′s and 90′s, as manufacturers looked for new solutions to drive costs down, the use of printed circuit boards and integrated circuits became commonplace. Classic tones to spacey echoes and other additional features could be added for relatively little and at a touch of a button; a nice trade-off. For better or worse, what was lost along the way was high quality transformers and point to point hand wiring of the circuits, amongst other things. These days, the cost to build a piece of equipment in its original form is considerably steep and would need to sell for a price that the marketplace is unwilling to pay.

So what differentiates a vintage item from junk? I can’t imagine doing design work on an Apple IIe and I wouldn’t trade my lightning quick workstation for one. But I’ll gladly trade a shiny new guitar for a dinged up, belt buckle rash, worn out, crackly input ‘72 Fender!

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Blogging – by Bob Frank

August 6th, 2009

3x4-bob

As I sit here trying to develop a cool new blog about medical connectors and cables, I am a bit stumped on what to share today. My mind drifts to this odd term blog and I decide to research its origin. Here is what I found on the Connectorsupplier.com website. “It’s widely believed that John Barger first used the term weblog in December 1997. Peter Merholz shortened it to blog in 1999, saying, “I’ve decided to pronounce the word ‘Weblog’ as ‘wee-blog.’ Or ‘blog’ for short.” (WordPress for Business Bloggers, by Paul Thewlis)” So there you go – a blog about blogging.

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Why we charge California Use tax – by Syeda Meherunnisa

August 4th, 2009

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Customers sometimes question the need to pay California Use Tax which we include in quotations and charge for tooling and production fixtures.

California Use Tax is imposed when you use, consume, give away or store tangible personal property, i.e., products you can see, weigh, feel or touch, such as tooling used to produce medical cables. The rate of Use Tax is determined by where the property will be used regardless of where the customer is located or their tax status.

Because we use tooling in production in Orange County California, we must charge California Use Tax at the local rate (currently 8.75%) in effect.

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Customer Care Team Welcomes Cesar Jara – by Suzann Sitka

July 30th, 2009

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Affinity Medical welcomed Cesar Jara to the Customer Care Team last week. We are pleased to have Cesar join our team as an additional resource for our customer partners. Cesar has experience in customer service and brings a lot of energy and enthusiasm to the job.

Everyone at Affinity Medical is very busy these days working on new projects and building cables for our customers. We have added work cells and expanded our second shift. Production is humming with activity. We feel fortunate and are happy to report good news in these challenging economical times.

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Cash Flow – by Mary Phillipp

July 28th, 2009

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Cash flow is the lifeblood of any business.

Like cash, inventory and accounts receivable are assets of a business. But, they are not cash, nor can they typically be converted quickly into cash. In periods of growth, inventory and accounts receivable levels typically increase which in effect utilizes available cash. If inventory and accounts receivable levels are not controlled, the business may run short of cash – a serious problem. It doesn’t seem logical that cash flow issues can occur as a result of growth, but indeed they do and can be crippling to a business if not well understood and managed.

Vigilance is required in both accounts receivable and inventory. Both must be kept at reasonable levels in order to maintain the capital necessary to allow a business to grow. Besides designing and manufacturing medical cable assemblies we work hard at Affinity to manage our business for long term stability and growth.

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Forty years ago man landed on the moon. Wow! – by Hank Mancini

July 21st, 2009

I am old enough to remember listening to the moon landing. It was truly exciting and I was proud of our country’s accomplishment.

It amazes me that we could send men to the moon and return them to earth safely in a time before we have many of the things we take for granted today. In July of 1969 we did not have:

  • Personal computers – The Apollo Guidance Computer that helped men get to and from the moon only had 4KB of RAM and 32KB of ROM
  • ATM’s (first ATM installed September 1969)
  • Cable Television
  • Cordless phones
  • Cell phonesmoon
  • Email
  • WWW.anything – no worldwide web and only a rudimentary internet called ARPNET
  • CD’s
  • DVD’s
  • I-pods and MP3 players

In terms of technology, 1969 seems like the dark ages, yet we sent men to the moon and they returned to earth safely!

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We are champions!!! – By Kevin Kom

July 16th, 2009

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Twenty three Affinity Medical team members recently completed our first Cell Champion training program. The 9 week course was designed to provide leadership and Lean Manufacturing training to those selected to be the company’s Work Cell Champions.

Increasing the number of our team members that are trained is another milestone accomplished in the company’s quest to achieve Manufacturing Excellence. Our Cell Champions will play a key role in educating the rest of the manufacturing team to Lean Manufacturing Principles and Continuous Improvement.

Congratulations to all who completed our Cell Champion training.

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Behind the Scenes of Manufacturing is Accounting – by Syeda Meherunnisa

July 13th, 2009

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People know Affinity as a manufacturer of medical cables. As a manufacturer, we produce products, but there is lot of behind the scenes activities that makes our company successful. One of these activities is accounting. Proper accounting has a direct impact on our company’s financial state, future prospects and even our jobs.

Accounting is the language of business. It is a service whose function is to provide quantitative information which can be used to make decisions. There are many activities in accounting but most important are accounts payable and accounts receivable.

Accounts payable are amounts a company owes to others because it purchased goods or services on credit from a supplier or vendor. Accounts receivable are amounts a company is owed by others because it sold goods or services on credit to a customer.
Accounts payable are liabilities. Accounts receivable are assets.

For a company to be successful it must collect money owed to it by customers and most successful companies also pay their bills on time!

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The Joy of Quality Audits – by Cindy Oldynski

July 9th, 2009

cindy-for-blog

One of the aspects of my job here at Affinity that I really enjoy is participating in audits. I am the management representative and the contact person when customers, notified bodies, federal or state agencies want to schedule an audit.

Affinity Medical is FDA registered and certified to ISO13485:2003. Our ISO registrar, BSI, audits our quality system twice a year to ISO 13485. We usually have at least one customer audit per month and we perform internal audits each quarter. Each audit is an opportunity to learn and challenge our systems. Having a robust quality system makes us a better partner for our customers.

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Phising – by Nannette Filbeck

July 6th, 2009

Computer security and protecting sensitive information is a concern here at Affinity, but should be a concern of all PC users.

7-6-09-fishing1
You may have been prompted to “turn on phishing filters” when you accessed the internet on your computer recently. You may have selected to turn the filter on because it was “recommended” by Microsoft but wondered what is phishing (pronounced fishing)

Phishing is a form of identity theft – a way to steal your personal information including your credit card numbers, on-line banking passwords and even your Social Security numbers.

Just like a fisherman uses a lure that resembles an actual fish or insect to attract fish, a phisher creates phony websites that look very similar to the genuine sites. Then he sends you an official looking email with a link to his phony website. Once you are in the website, you may be asked to type in your username and password, Social Security number, credit card account number, etc. Just like a fish – you are hooked!

Now the phisher has the password to your account or he may download software (spyware or crimeware) on your computer to collect information without your knowledge. APWG (Anti Phising Work Group) reported the number of crimeware -spreading sites infecting PCs with password-stealing crimeware increased by 827% from January to December 2008. APWG suggests the following anti-phishing steps:

1. Don’t trust links in an email2. Never give out personal information upon email request
3. Look carefully at the web address. Phishers like to create web addresses that look very similar to the legitimate ones: http://www.welllsfargo.com or http://annazon.com.
4. Type the real address into your web browser
5. Don’t call company phone numbers in email or instant messages. Use a phone book or the numbers shown on your credit card statement
6. Don’t open unexpected email attachments.
7. Don’t disable your antivirus program. Let your schedule scans run

Simple steps may help you avoid becoming the victim of identity theft!

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