Space Shuttle
January 28th 1986 - the space shuttle Challenger explodes just one minute after launch. As the world looked on horrified, few realised that this was an inevitable accident that had been predicted by the designers for years. Indeed, the day before the key engineers believed that there was “essentially a 100% probability of disaster”.
After the accident NASA realised that they had pushed the boundaries too far and embarked upon major management reforms. Sadly the reforms made the launches look almost too safe and as a result over the subsequent years standards and relationships slipped once more.
Then in February 2003 – the Space Shuttle Colombia burns up on re-entry and the entire crew perish. The chilling fact was that this was a management repeat of the Challenger disaster – NASA had not truly learned the lessons of the past.
Key Messages:
- Importance of real Communication
- Risk Assessment
- Inter-organisational Co-ordination
- Keeping Organisational Learning alive
- Dangers of Groupthink
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The Evolution of Threat Models for Secure Communication ProductsPhil ZimmermannTuesday Jun 19, 09:30
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Where Does the Real World End - The Blurring of the Physical and DigitalRebecca ParsonsTuesday Jun 19, 17:30
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Democratizing Distributed Systems: Kubernetes, Brigade, Metaparticle and BeyondBrendan BurnsWednesday Jun 20, 09:30
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Space ShuttleStephen CarverWednesday Jun 20, 17:20