#one dwm project down
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thesaltybuns · 3 years ago
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I was in need of some indulgent self care yesterday, and since I got so many Silco goodies in the mail I figured I’d stay on theme, so I drew one of my favorite scenes from @ink-and-dagger‘s Drink With Me, inspired by this post!
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mizgnomer · 2 years ago
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Behind the Scenes of Dreamland
Excerpts from Dan Berry's article in Doctor Who Magazine #414:
At the recording, the cast has assembled in the green room, and a discussion about guest star David Warner's sci-fi credentials has evolved into a race to name all the Star Trek films. At midday, the recording is already running ahead of schedule, so cast that crew break for lunch. Both Davids discuss their experience of Shakespeare, with Warner pointing out that he'd tackled the Klingon version of Hamlet for one of his Star Trek appearances, and a bewildered David Tennant disappointed that his colleague can't remember any of the alien lines. When we return to the green room, the first day of recording is about to finish, and Georgia Moffett - who's playing companion Cassie Rice - has started doing the washing up, much to the embarrassment of the runners. After witnessing a short battle for control of the sink, DWM sits down with Gary Russell to talk about the genesis of the project. DWM: Georgia, you played Jenny in 2008's The Doctor's Daughter. Does your character have a different relationship with the Doctor this time? Georgia: Yeah, absolutely. The Doctor spent a large amount of that television episode not appreciating Jenny's company, whereas now he's alone, so discovering Cassie and Jimmy is quite exciting. It's nice for him to have some companions again! And David's brilliant to work with, so it's always a joy
Links to all behind-the-scenes sets can be found [ here ].
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ink-and-dagger · 2 years ago
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HI INKY
just a curious lil question from lil ol’ me- are you working on any more one shots or AUs right now? No pressure obvs! I’m just interested to see what other ideas are rattling around in your unbelievably talented brain!
OOH you curious little bean you. Well obviously I'm going to tell you since you basically called my brain big and juicy and that's always a good way to butter me up 😘
But I’ll stick everything under a read more cut just in case anyone would rather leave it as a surprise 👇🏼
There are truly so many ideas I have in mind to do. So this is by no means a comprehensive list. This is only scratching the surface of what I’m planning/have already plotted. But I want to avoid mentioning things that I know I may not get around to writing for a while. So these are all projects that are closer to the top of my list.
The main three projects I’m working on right now:
The Talk - a Jasper POV. So this is set perhaps a month or so after the events of DWM, and centres around Jasper struggling to come to terms with Silco and Astrid’s relationship. I’m about half way through the first draft.
Part 3 of the DWM Virgin AU. Obviously I’ve gotta finish this bad boy. I haven’t put words down on the page yet, I’m still working out all the elements in my head. Sort of like what happened with the og DWM, this AU got a lot more ✨feelings-y✨ than I’d originally planned. So my original plot idea for part 3 doesn’t fit anymore.
Private Booth. This is literally almost ready to go. Just need to round it off and run through some edits. It might possibly be my spiciest fic to date… it definitely at least matches Chap13 in heat🌶
The thing is, that even though the main storyline is finished, I still have specific plot lines/set ups in my head for these characters that need to publish in a particular order. So certain fics need to happen before other fics can happen… if ya get me 😉
I’m also considering using NaNoWriMo as a way to bash out a first rough draft of the Silco POV. I’ve never done NaNo before so have zero clue how it works.
Here are some rough very much working titles of some other fics that are swimming towards the surface of my to do list. If anyone’s curious about any of these I might be inclined to give a little more info if you drop an ask my way😘
Insomnia (DWM)
Soaked (DWM)
Rumour has it (DWM)
Spicy spicy hot hot (DWM)
The [redacted] chronicles (DWM)
Filthy (not DWM)
Finally, the top three most commonly requested Astro prompts that I will definitely get to at some point:
Silco meeting Astrid's Mum
Silco and Astrid going to a topside gala
Astrid domming Silco [ya nasty pervs]
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retphienix · 3 years ago
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There are so many fucking games I want to play for the blog and I hypothetically have the time, but the energy, the attention span, the drive?
In more positive terms here are some various titles I plan to give a shot for the blog.
Let's do a 5am state of the blog kind of thing to clear some thoughts, eh?
Morrowind (Current Game ramble)
For the moment the blog is more or less on break with me playing Morrowind ""For the blog"" but mostly for me, because that's just a game I've wanted to explore. Not that every other game on the blog isn't that, just that I looked at Morrowind and said "That'll be a terrible game to present naturally. That's a stream game, or a condensed video, not a liveblog" and then did it anyway.
I'm loving Morrowind! Honestly the sense of mystery, fantasy, and adventure is just chef kiss levels of perfect to me.
But it's terrible in a photoset, I'm not particularly interested in doing another format for the game, and it's a game with less 'intense narrative themes!' and more 'Incredibly different game design compared to modern Bethesda' in terms of discussion material and let's all be real here:
We're all fucking tired of that conversation lol.
So there ain't much to talk on in depth, it's more of a "Here's a newbie seeing new things!" playthrough with nothing to talk about after the fact, which ain't a strong point for the blog- again- that's a stream/video kind of thing.
ANYWHO- Morrowind fun, about the only news I can offer on that series is that it might abruptly end and become a 'for me' series because I'm not particularly interested in beating the game nearly as much as I'm interested in exploring aimlessly and seeing what happens.
I'm not playing Morrowind for the end goal of beating the main quest, or beating the DLCs. I'm playing it to wander into caves and find new pants, so if I reach a point where I'm satisfied with what I've shared and my motivation has not borne a new end goal then I'll end the live blog and move on to a new game :P
Backlog
The short statement I'll make is that this blog is a hell for my backlog.
Even without infinite money on hand I've ended up with so many physical and digital games just sitting here waiting to be played either because they caught my eye or because of recommendations by various people over the years.
I keep sitting down, cataloguing my backlog, realizing it's pointless to catalog, deleting it all, and then starting over yet again.
The fact is, if anyone recommended it it's probably still sitting in a text document somewhere, or physically on my shelf, and I don't remotely know when I'll get to it.
I've yet to hit the point where I decide to turn this blog into work, so I have never sat down and gone "Well, Retphienix NEEDS to post! Sit down, 8-12 hours minimum, let's play the next game!"
And part of me wishes I'd do that, but the fact is this isn't a job. There's no money here, there's the opposite even! I don't remotely see it that way, but if you squint and tilt your head I've spent a lot of money on this blog over the years.
Capture devices (a lot of them!), consoles specifically bought for the blog, controllers out the wazoo, I've gone through multiple computers for this thing, and the games, my lord the games- so many games.
And that's fiscally, what about manpower? So many hours have gone into this blog, so many hours poured into the background of making all this work, researching shit, putting my all into formulating my opinions clearly for posts, writing, hell video shit even though it's mostly clips as my one step into edited content became an impromptu awkward hiatus from doing more lol.
What was I on about.
Despite all that nonsense, Retphienix is a passion project. Not a job.
If I lack the passion in some sense then the work doesn't get done "just for the sake of the work". And I don't mean lost passion as much as "No motivation on x day; tired on y day; interested in doing something else on z day" etc.
If things aren't clickin' I don't force it, so the blog has all this backlog and isn't put together in a way that facilitates burning through it quickly.
I do sometimes wish things were different though, I know I'd still enjoy such a playstyle, but I can't justify "faking it til you make it" in a format that literally isn't built to pay and was never intended to.
I can't work myself for nothin'.
Hypothetical "Next" games
While the backlog is a wild wasteland of titles, there are some that just kinda guarantee their spots sooner rather than later.
Yakuza 6 and 7 along with Judgment, obviously. The series is one of my all time favorites and I generally have some of my absolute most fun on the blog side of things with those games, so it's a winner on two fronts. It's just fun to react to, post out of context things for, and talk with other fans about and for whatever reason tumblr has a healthy enough fanbase for the series that my meager blog gets some attention there.
Dragon Quest has a strangely weighted chance all things considered. DQ has many of the same advantages as Yakuza- it's a series I adore, it's fun to talk about in this format, and the fandom is big enough to occasionally spill my way making the blogging experience a bit more fun. It's also a series where I don't know what'd come next to be fair. Probably DQ4? I mean, might as well continue on from that point since I have 1-3 done. I can't exactly justify replaying the entirety of DQ11 no matter how much I want to! Turning on the games above gave me DQ goosebumps which kinda settled how likely it is to show up sooner rather than later, lol.
Jeez. I looked at one of my surviving lists and that's like all that's popping out at me.
Other series feel like giant leaps with no gas in the tank, like do I want to start playing Kingdom Hearts? Not really, not right now. Do I finally play Lisa? Eeeeeeh. Persona? Hmmmm.
I haven't the fuzziest. There are so many one off interesting titles, but if the drive ain't there they might as well be textbooks.
Perhaps instead of any major next game I'll just do some afternoons exploring random titles for a bit here and there with no intention of beating em.
The idea is enticing as hell, but the feeling of not giving the game's a "real shake" feels bad.
We'll see. The only certainties seem to be Yakuza and DQ, as much as I'd prefer far more.
Side project hypotheticals
Outside of the basic live blog stuff I'm still interested in exploring scripted stuff. Mostly to prove to myself that I can overcome some anxieties and break from the meandering pace the last effort gave- I can write! That much I know! So just gotta trick myself into writing for a video and then make the video after the fact lol.
Current thoughts are on a video exploring the monster taming sub-genre. It's a genre near and dear to my heart, and one I know some weird things about as is- but mostly it's a genre I KNOW I know very little about despite that, so I'd like to give it an overall look, or perhaps just explore some random entries, I haven't a clue lol. I'd mostly like an opportunity to talk about some interesting entries in the genre, things like explaining my adoration for DWM while explaining how the flaws make it really rough today, or the interesting mash of genres that is Lost Magic, or the more modern take that mashes idle-like mechanics with Siralim Ultimate.
Won't lie, playing the demo for Monster Hunter Stories 2 threw a wrench in that plan because it made me want to talk about it and how the genre might have a new breath of life after really grinding to a halt as pokemon became what it is today, but all to be seen or not lol.
As far as other things like streams? Not really.
The concept of writing a bit more on games is tickling the back of my head lately, but that mostly just means "more posts that aren't live-blogging" as I haven't the fuzziest where I'd share such nonsense.
Really it's all up in the air as far as retphienix content is concerned, beyond the live blogging obviously.
5am closing
It's fun to explore what games have to offer, both on the individual level, the personal level, and as a whole- as a medium.
So I like Retphienix.
And I like all I've made here.
I hope to continue for a long, long time- no matter what future formats might look like.
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visualvoice8 · 6 years ago
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DWM 1-6 tracklist
------PLAYLIST----------- DMM - Dark Wave Mix Part I CD1 01 Blutengel - Soulof Ice.mp3 02 Accessory - Deadline.mp3 03 Assemblage 23 - Purgatory.mp3 04 Apoptygma Berzerk - Unicorn.mp3 05 Angels & Agony - Forever.mp3 06 Blutengel - Bloody Pleasures.mp3 07 Pandique - Light Of Justice (Org. Mix).mp3 08 Apoptygma Berzerk - Spindizzy.mp3 09 Blutengel - Inscape.mp3 10 Vnv Nation - Rubicon.mp3 11 Vnv Nation - Saviour.mp3 12 Apoptygma Berzerk - Unitel The End Of The World.mp3 13 Absurd Minds - Welcome O The Cyberspace.mp3 14 Absurd Minds - Deception (E-Craft Rmx).mp3 15 Absurd Minds - Die Stimme.mp3 16 Blutengel - I'm Dying Alone.mp3 cd2 01 Angels & Agony - Revelation (Shiva Mix).mp3 02 Blutengel - Black Roses (Male Version).mp3 03 Apoptygma Berzerk - Until The End Of The World.mp3 04 Apoptygma Berzerk - Rollergirl.mp3 05 Iris - Annie Would I Lie To You (Rmx).mp3 06 Terminal Choice - Collective Suicide.mp3 07 Illuminate - Nur Für Dich.mp3 08 Diorama - Kain's Advice.mp3 09 Altrocity - Maid Of Orleans.mp3 10 Project Pitchfork - Time Killer (And One Rmx).mp3 11 Solitary Experiments - Paradox.mp3 12 Accessory - Secret Culture.mp3 13 Terminal Choice - White Angel.mp3 14 Blutengel - Seelenschmerz.mp3 15 Inscape - Verbrannte Welt (Mystic Mix).mp3 16 Prager Handgriff - Touch Me.mp3 17 Cut.Rate.Box. - Behind The Wheel.mp3 18 Funker Vogt - You Can Win If You Want.mp3 DMM - Dark Wave Mix Part II cd1 01 Blutengel - Forever (Dark Pop Mix).mp3 02 The Tetrosic - Antichrist.mp3 03 Soil & Eclipse - Bridges.mp3 04 Lights Of Euphoria - True Life (VNV Nation Rmx).mp3 05 Deine Lakaien - Where you are (VNV Nation remix).mp3 06 Camouflage - Me And You.mp3 07 Covenant - Bullet (Club Version).mp3 08 Rotersand - Merging Oceans.mp3 09 Glis - Nightvision (v2.0).mp3 10 Beborn Beton - Dr. Channard (Funker Vogt Rmx).mp3 11 Dark Voices - Girl, If You Really Want.mp3 12 NamNamBulu - Memories (KMS Rmx).mp3 13 The Dust Of Basement - Desire.mp3 14 Informatik - Over.mp3 15 Negative Format - Fuse.mp3 16 Praga Khan - Glamour Girl.mp3 17 Tristesse de la Lune - Queen of the Damned.mp3 cd2 01 Psyche - The Quickening (Club Rmx).mp3 02 Nothern Lite - My Pain.mp3 03 Pride And Fall - Construct.mp3 04 VNV Nation - Beloved (Grey Down Rmx).mp3 05 Sara Noxx - She.mp3 06 The Dust Of Basement - Gift (Moog Rmx).mp3 07 NamNamBulu - Now Or Never (Distant Rmx).mp3 08 Lucifer - The Pain Song.mp3 09 Mesh - Friends Like These.mp3 10 Seabound - Hooked.mp3 11 Lights Of Euphoria - True Life.mp3 12 Culture Kultür - Wonder.mp3 13 Fictional - Blue Lights.mp3 14 Neuroticfish - Skin.mp3 15 Assemblage 23 - Drive.mp3 16 [-SITD-] - Venom.mp3 17 Camouflage - I can't feel you.mp3 DMM - Dark Wave Mix Part III cd1 01 Rotersand - Lifelight.mp3 02 Sero Overdose - Einsamkeit (Eclipse Edit).mp3 03 Pride And Fall - December.mp3 04 Icon Of Coil - Acces And Amplify.mp3 05 T.O.Y. - Loner (Remix).mp3 06 Sara Noxx - Colder And Colder.mp3 07 The Human League - All I Ever Wanted.mp3 08 Lights Of Euphoria - In Love With The Night.mp3 09 The Crüxshadows - Tears (Remix).mp3 10 Culture Kultür - Revolution Time.mp3 11 Plastic - Lovesong (Bts-Mix).mp3 12 Namnambulu - Memories.mp3 13 Funker Vogt - Lügner.mp3 14 Say Y - Angels (Remix).mp3 15 Perfidious Words - Visionary (Remix).mp3 16 Color Theory - Leave In Silence.mp3 17 Codename Sugar - Im Down.mp3 18 Tristesse De La Lune - Strangeland.mp3 19 Evils Toy - Angels Only.mp3 DMM - Dark Wave Mix Part IV cd1 01 Nightwish - Deep silent complite.mp3 02 Sara Nox - If You.mp3 03 Melotron - Folge mir ins licht.mp3 04 DeVision - Drifting Sideways (RMX).mp3 05 Pride and Fall - Omniscent.mp3 06 BlutEngel - Go to hell.mp3 07 T.O.Y. - Fairytale.mp3 08 Psyche - Final Destynation.mp3 09 Apoptygma berzerk - Deep red.mp3 10 Wolfsheim - Blind (RMX).mp3 11 Lights of euphoria - Consequence.mp3 12 NV Nation - Standing.mp3 13 NamNamBulu - Beaten.mp3 14 Gils - Discontent.mp3 15 Lost Signal - Apathy.mp3 16 Say - Y - Colours of my radio.mp3 17 Iris - You arethe answer.mp3 18 Decodet Feedback - Haven.mp3 19 Apoptygma berzerk - Nothing else matters.mp3 DMM - Dark Wave Mix Part V cd1 01 Theatre Of Tragedy - Machine (VNV Nation remix) .mp3 02 KMFDM - These Boots Are Made For Walkin.mp3 03 Terminal Choice - Castles In The Sky.mp3 04 Colony 5 - My World.mp3 05 Syrian - Space Navigation.mp3 06 November Process - Decadence.mp3 07 Mechanical Moth - Fallen into you .mp3 08 Aslan Faction - Bring On The Dying.mp3 09 Diorama - Contradictive.mp3 10 Kirlian Camera - Eclipse.mp3 11 Seabound - Poisonous Friend.mp3 12 Cesium 137 - Atrophy.mp3 13 Real Life - Kamikaze.mp3 14 Rotersand - Hidden.mp3 15 Nekrodamus - Nosferatu.mp3 16 Colony 5 - Hate.mp3 17 Lost Signal - Torment.mp3 18 The 69 Eyes - Call Me It.mp3 cd2 01 DeVision - Someone To Draw The Sword.mp3 02 Apoptygma Berzerk - Nearer.mp3 03 VNV Nation - Legion (Anachron).mp3 04 Lights Of Euphoria - Waiting For The Night.mp3 05 Wolfsheim - Annie.mp3 06 The Dust Of Basement - Welcome To The Greif Destruct.mp3 07 And One - Mirror In Your Heart.mp3 08 Evils Toy - Do Dreams Bleed.mp3 09 Ravenous - Underwater Gardens.mp3 10 L'ame Immortelle - Another Day.mp3 11 Perfidious Words - Estrangement.mp3 12 Blue Audio - Life.mp3 13 Statemachine - A Crying Statue.mp3 14 Blind Passengers - You Know My Feelings.mp3 15 Romeo - Julia.mp3 16 Leather Strip - Coming Up For Air (Ravenous Rmx).mp3 17 Project Pitchfork - I'll Find My Way Home.mp3 18 Clan Of Xymox - Tonight.mp3 DMM - Dark Wave Mix Part VI cd1 01 Navigator.mp3 02 Transperent frequencies.mp3 03 True Life (Davantage Remix).mp3 04 Existence ( VNV Nation Rmx).mp3 05 In My Dream.mp3 06 Beloved (Grey Down Version).mp3 07 Forever.mp3 08 Falling Out .mp3 09 Wake Me Up.mp3 10 The World Belongs to Us.mp3 11 Never Ever (Solitary Remix).mp3 12 Explicit.mp3 13 Six Feet Under.mp3 14 Deathwish.mp3 15 The Conductor.mp3
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quatrainin · 4 years ago
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Top Corporate Training & Courses in India.
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Total quality management (TQM) discovers a management system wherein a company arrives at organizational advancement through a commitment to customer requirements. A company can only meet those requirements when it empowers every employee in every function to maintain high standards and work for continuous improvement. Total quality management is that the precursor of the many quality management systems, like six letters of the alphabet, Lean, and ISO.
TQM is a company-wide initiative to involve everyone in doing the first time right for the customer.
“Do things right, the first time and every time.”
TQM Principles
Customer Satisfaction
Employee Commitment
Fact-Based Decision Making
Effective Communications
Strategic Thinking
Integrated System
Process-Approach
Continuous Improvement
Roots of TQM
The roots of the principles and pattern of TQM extend back to the first 20th century and Frederick Taylor’s Principles of Scientific Management that advocated an even method of executing tasks and inspecting finished work to foreclose defective products from departing the shop. Advance innovation came in the 1920s with Walter Shewhart’s expansion of statistical process controls, which one could apply at any point in the production process to forecast quality levels. It was Shewhart who formulated the control chart which is used today.
During the 20s and 30s, Shewhart’s friend and mentee, William Deming, built-up statistical process control theories that he would eventually use to help the US Census department in the early 1940s. This was the beginning use of statistical process control in a non-manufacturing field.
The Quality Era in Japan
Following the world war, early American quality theorists, including Deming, who would achieve hero status in Japan, notified Japanese industry on how to amend processes and output to reconstruct their war-shattered economy. At the time, the term which was made in Japan was similar with shoddy craftsmanship. As early as 1945, seers and electrical engineer Homer Sarasohn spoke about containing variation and supervising process to bring on best deliverables.
As a result, in the 1950s, quality became the proverb for Japanese manufacturing. Quality pertained not just management, but all levels of a company. In the 1960s, quality circles started coming out in Japanese workplaces and furnish employees the opportunity to talk about problems and consider solutions, which they then demonstrated to management. Commencing on the factory or so called shop floor, quality circles expended to other functional departments. The company-wide focus on quality may also provide a clew to the origin of the phrase TOTAL QUALITY.
TQM in the USA
In early 1970’s, since the end of WWII, the main effort in American factories was to produce a large quantity of items, maintain the production schedule, and save money. Usability and durability rarely weighed until concerns about lack of product quality reached a fever pitch.
As Japan with success challenged the U. S. for industrial leadership, USA business currently took a page from Japan’s quality improvement book.
A new interest in quality management took hold, building on the work of Shewhart’s disciples, like Deming, Josef Juran, and Kaoru Ishikawa in Japan. Influential businessmen like Philip Crosby championed the trend. Although the growth of TQM seems to have occurred exclusively within the districts of industry, the basic outlines of the concept owe much to a 1980s US Navy project that used Shewhart and Deming’s PDCA (plan, do, check, act) model.
TQM Adjoins the World
Quality management began in producing, and TQM, like it’s later methodologies, custom-made well to finance, healthcare, and different fields.
Some of the landmark corporations to adopt TQM embrace Toyota, Ford, and Philips Semiconductors. Worldwide, countries like European nation, France, the UK, and Turkey established TQM standards.
ISO Superseds TQM
By the Nineties, TQM was outdated by ISO (International Standards Organization), that became the quality for a lot of continental Europe, and by another method response of the Nineteen Eighties to quality concerns, Six Sigma. However, TQM principles form the basis for much of ISO and Six Sigma.
For example, PDCA seems beneath the Six letter of the alphabet methodology DMAIC (define, measure, analyze, improve, control). And within the 2000s, the ISO governing body recognized TQM as a foundational philosophy.
TQM lives on in data-driven ways for a data-driven age.
Why is TQM Important to an Organization?
When it admits the completely company in the pursuit of high quality. An example is that the quality circle, in which workers directly involved in a process brainstorm to discover solutions. “People are a fabulous resource that is often underutilized”. Worker know how to fix problems. Implementing a TQM philosophy can help an organization:
Ensure customer satisfaction and customer loyalty
Ensure increased revenues and higher productivity
Reduce waste and inventory
Improve design
Adapt to changing markets and regulatory environments
Increase productivity
Enhance market image
Eliminate defects and waste
Increase job security
Improve employee morale
Reduce costs
Increase profitability
How Do You Implement Total Quality Management?
PDCA lies at the core of the many twentieth century quality efforts. PDCA began within the Nineteen Twenties as a creation by engineer and statistician conductor Shewhart. It had been originally known as PDSA (plan, do, study, act) wide disseminated by Deming, World Health Organization cited it because the Shewhart cycle, it’s currently typically cited because the Deming cycle.
In 2000, ISO acknowledged PDCA as a foundational methodology. It seems once more in Six alphabetic characters because the DMAIC methodology (define, measure, analyze, improve, and control). Walters notes that TQM is way additional folks familiarised, where six alphabetic character is method primarily based. He checks, as an example, that the term outline “takes the human component out” and also the term live focuses on knowledge.
TQM & Six Sigma: Which One When?
While TQM’s method of employing employees as a source of ideas and solutions can help companies, Six Sigma’s process and measurement focus — which promotes data-driven decisions — offers obliging benefits. Walters uses the instance of manufacturing spread and jelly sandwiches.
“We’d begin out with 2 items of bread, add the peanut butter, add the jelly, and put the two pieces of bread together. But, maybe the edges are banged up together. Maybe the corners are altered. Or, when our customers get it, they say the bread is boggy. Within that method, we’re not sure whether we’re putting on too much jelly or whether we’re using the wrong type of peanut butter. You just don’t know what it is, so you have these group meetings and brainstorm till your customer response is what you want, and the level of acceptance of your quote unquote quality product is wherever you want it to be” says Walters. With Six Sigma, however, the calling into question process would drill down to the details. What kind of bread were you using? What kind of peanut butter? What kind of jelly?
“That to me is the benefit since it takes the onus off the people and focuses rigorously on the process,” asserts Walters. “So, if we tend to tighten the method, we can feel like we already have quality people. And after the process is recurring in the same manner, even if there are other performance issues that automatically sets you back to the human side. But then you’ll manage the human issue properly as a result of which you don’t ought to worry regarding your processes. Your numbers aren’t changing.”
Walters states further that almost companies want to develop brand loyalty, even if their product is fundamentally the same as a competitor’s. “If we tend to use TQM, we hope a product is of better quality, so you’ll come back. With TQM, you’ve got to attend for your customers to verify that it’s sensible. With Six letter of the alphabet, at the end of the day, you don’t guess if your product is better. You know it. If you properly identify your market and your product has the best fit for the niche, you know you have the better product from a process view. That leads to the thicker relationships,” he says.
KEY PLAYERS IN TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT: CUSTOMERS, SUPPLIERS, AND staff.
-Tqm Principles & Concepts
-Statistical Tool & Techniques For Tqm
                1.  7 Qc Tools
               2.  Measurement System Analysis (MSA)
                3.Statistical Process Control (SPC)
-Customer Focus – Participation & Team Work
-Customer Satisfaction Measurement
-Problem Solving
-Quality Circles
-Quality Circles
-Auditing Techniques
-Kaizen
-Techniques Of Housekeeping (5s)
-8-Discipline Methodologies For Problem Solving
-Why-Why Analysis – Root Cause Analysis
-Business Process Mapping
-Daily Work Management (DWM)Shop Floor Supervisor Development Program
Quatrain Solutions Pvt. Ltd. (QuaTrain) is the premier corporate training and consulting organization in India specialized in the field of Business Excellence, Six Sigma, TQM, Lean Implementation, ISO related trainings, IT Trainings, Technical Trainings, Soft, Behavioural and Developmental programs and started with an aim of building capabilities of working professionals across various domains and functions.
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doctorwhonews · 7 years ago
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Shada (DVD/Blu-Ray/Steelbook)
Latest Review: Shada Written by: Douglas Adams Directed by: Pennant Roberts, Charles Norton Produced by: Graham Williams Cast Tom Baker (The Doctor), Lalla Ward (Romana), David Brierly (K9), Christopher Neame (Skagra), Daniel Hill (Chris Parsons), Denis Carey (Professor Chronotis), Victoria Burgoyne (Clare Knightley), Gerald Campion (Wilkin), Shirley Dixon (Ship), Derek Pollitt (Caldera), James Coombes (voice of the Kraags), John Hallet (Police Constable), David Strong (Man in Car) Cover Art: Lee Binding (DVD, Blu-Ray), Adrian Salmon (Steelbook) Originally Released: November 2017 Shada Reborn Quite possibly a record-breaking candidate for the longest filming period for a single script, Shada bridges two millennia – from 1979 to 2017 – and represents a heroic effort to finally plug one of the most egregious gaps in the Doctor Who canon. In a way, Shada mirrors the antagonist of that other great Douglas Adams story, City of Death. Just as Scaraoth is shattered into dozens of versions of himself across the centuries, the industrial action that stymied the original production of the serial saw it fractured into a number of variants and doppelgangers. Most famously, Adams decided the root concepts and ideas behind his final Doctor Who script were too good to waste and they found their way into his Doctorless novel Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency. In 1992, a rough edit of the surviving footage was patched together with exposition from Tom Baker and some unsympathetic synthesizer music. Later again, an animated incarnation saw Paul McGann’s Eighth Doctor reunite with Romana and K9 and a new supporting cast to cure a nagging feeling of something undone in Cambridge 1979. But this Shada is very much the real deal. The entire surviving cast have been reunited to record the missing dialogue, the missing sequences have been animated where appropriate, though brand new models and have constructed and filmed by the Model Unit to act as inserts in the live action scenes, and a brand new score by Mark Ayers is constructed like an act of musical archaeology to recreate the instruments, methods and style of 1970s legend Dudley Simpson. It can never by Shada as it would have been, but it by far lays the strongest claim to being the definitive article. As with any such project, the team had to make creative decisions and not everyone will agree with all of them. For instance, with Denis Carey (Professor Chronotis) and David Brierly (K9) having died since their original contribution a couple of minor scenes requiring them are left unanimated, while others have their presence reduced to lines which could be reproduced from other recordings of the actors. While some no doubt may have preferred soundalikes to be used to make as complete a version as possible, it’s a sensitive decision and highlights that, in fact, the missing moments were largely padding anyway. Similarly, but much more controversially, is the decision to assemble Shada as a 138 minute film rather than as six episodes. (It even has - steady yourself - a pre-titles sequence). This will go against every instinct of many long term fans, still sore from VHS cassettes of hacked down stories and the fight to get episodic releases. But in this case it seems to work. Watched in one sitting it makes for a breezy, fun, adventure – yet the way the story is paced would have seen the episodic version with a curiously uneventful Part One and a number of extremely undramatic cliffhangers (only the midway point would have given us something as genuinely brilliant as “Dead men require no oxygen”). For me, the only genuinely poor decision is to seize on the existence of the original K9 prop, some original wall panels from the 1979 set, and the surviving (bottom) half of an original Kraag monster costume to recreate a few shots of K9 fighting a Kraag. I appreciate the sentiment behind it, but the fact the surviving bit of set to squeeze them into is so small, and the Kraag only visible from the waist down, makes for a weirdly, and unintentionally silly, looking moment that takes you out of the flow of the story more than the switches to animation do. Few would argue, though against the decision to bring in Martin Gergharty and Adrian Salmon to do design work for the animation. Not only are they brilliant in their own right, creating clear lined, loyal yet character-filled, interpretations of the cast in warm, friendly colours, it also helps smooth over the slightly stilted, flash style – the characters may not feel like they have a full range of human movement, but the presence of Gergharty’s art, so familiar to the readership of Doctor Who Magazine, makes it feel almost like panels from the beloved DWM comic strip brought to life.   Shada Reviewed But has all this effort simply been an ultimate exercise in obsessive, fannish, completeness? Are we seeing the resurrection of a poor story just because it’s there to be done, or the completion of a classic in its own right?  In short – is Shada actually any good? As it happens, Shada is brilliant jewel to add to Doctor Who’s crown if one, like all the most spectacular diamonds, not without its flaws. One the wittiest of Who scripts, and certainly with one of the most fascinating premises, at six parts it’s basically City of Death with extra portions. Famously, one of the script’s biggest critics is its own author – written, as it was, at a point when Douglas Adams was juggling several different projects and deadlines and pouring his greatest effort into his own personal work rather than Doctor Who. Considering that a billion years from now, stuck in the glovebox of an interplanetary roadster, the fruits of that rival project may be the last sign of the human race’s existence, it would be churlish to complain about that but still, Adams is being ungenerous about the serial. In almost every way, this is the fullest encapsulation of the latter half Tom Baker years. Tom himself exudes the same sort of relaxed charm, peppered with moments of total nonsense that marked City of Death while Lalla Ward has never seemed more possessed of an unearthly beauty. All of their scenes together are a joy and something as simple as them going boating, or visiting an old friend in his rooms for tea is all stuff I could watch hours of, even without any alien menaces showing up. And the alien menace that does show up is stupendous – possibly the most unbelievable thing about the whole story is the revelation on the commentary track that the people in the background of Cambridge genuinely ignored Christopher Neame in his outrageous hat and slowing silver cape as if he was an everyday sight. But the massively fun campness of Neame’s character Skagra is balanced by the imaginative and typically Adamsian plot the villain has hatched. Skagra is unusually preoccupied with the heat death of the universe in several billion years’ time and obsessed with stopping it. Like solving the central question of  Life, the Universe, and Everything the main stumbling block to finding the answer is processing power – so he’s going to absorb every mind in the universe into one great gestalt entity, so that every being in creation is simply a conduit for finding a way to save it without the petty distractions of life. In a way, it’s Douglas Adams inventing cloud computing thirty years early and typical of the scientific verve and imagination he brought to everything he wrote. (Tellingly, a year later his replacement would also craft a story about forestalling the heat death of the universe but, while propounding the superiority of ‘hard science’, would solve it by inventing some space wizards who use magic words to make it go away).There are undoubtedly flaws, mostly as we race towards the end with the mounting sense of a script with the ink still wet and no time for afterthought or final drafts. Chris Parsons is probably the best of the solid young everymen Doctor Who has ever featured, and pitched perfectly by Daniel Hall, yet despite early episodes spending more time of introducing and building on his character, he gets lost in the shuffle of the climax. There’s even a dramatic scene of Chris making a vital deduction and racing out to save the day, only for Adams to be plainly unable to think of anything to give him to do once he gets there (a problem Gareth Roberts ingeniously solved in his 2012 novelization but which, presumably for purity’s sake, the producers here don’t take the opportunity to steal). Meanwhile, the Kraag outfits are really quite poor, even for the era that gave us the Nimon and the Mandrel, and a lot of the location film work in Cambridge feels rather loose and in need of a tighter edit.Yet, there’s an inescapable magic to Shada that goes well beyond its status as a mythical ‘lost’ story, and had it been completed in 1979 it would still have been regarded as one of the highpoints of Season Seventeen.   Extras This release comes with a full set of extras the complement the story perfectly. A commentary orchestrated by the unsinkable Toby Hadoke on less funding than the bus fare into town sees him interview Neame and Hall about their experiences during filming, and Gergharty and animator Ann Marie Walsh about the pressures and effort involved in creating the project against incredibly tight deadlines. Taken Out of Time interviews many of the those involved in front of and behind the cameras on the original production to build a picture of exactly how it came to abandoned in the first place. Strike! Strike! Strike! uses contributions from those involved in industrial relations at the time to help explain exactly how the unions of 1970s television came to be so powerful, and give a potted history of their rise and fall through the lens of how industrial action had impacted Doctor Who over the decades both negatively (when it was at the BBC) and positively (when it was arch rival ITV left showing blank screens opposite the Doctor’s adventures).  Both of these are proper, half hour documentaries that tell a story of their own almost as compelling as Shada itself. There’s also fascinating Studio Sesssions - 1979, showing the working methods of the cast and crew in-studio as the cameras roll between takes. Most fun of all is are the Dialogue Sessions – in which we get to see Tom Baker and Daniel Hall record their contributions for the animation, with all Tom’s uproarious ad libs and suggestions for improvements to the script intact. The extras are rounded out with the video of the Model Unit filming of Skagra’s space station and ship, as well as the TARDIS model, new footage taken of Daniel Hall and Tom Baker’s stand-in as reference for animation, photo galleries, as well as the obligatory Now and Then tour of what the Cambridge locatoins look like three decades on. ROM content even includes a full set of scripts, storyboards, and the 1979 Doctor Who Annual (if, rather bizarrely, packed as 56 separate image files).The Steelbook release goes even further to try and lay claim to the definitive Shada package – with a third disc containing the 1992 reconstruction and the 2003 Paul McGann web animation adaptation (remastered for viewing on TV screens rather than computer monitors). About the only thing not included is the novelization.   Presentation and Packaging The DVD version has a slightly astonishing error where the coding that tells a television to display it as 16:9 or 4:3 is messed up – meaning that if watched on a 4:3 television the image will appear in the centre of the screen, with black bars on all sides – top, bottom, left and right. On a modern 16:9 television it displays the picture correctly (with bars on left and right as this is archive television intended as 4:3) but even then some resolution is lost as the image is basically being blown up to fit. That said, you’d be hard pressed to actually notice the lower resolution on viewing the DVD and it probably still looks better than it would have done on the average 1970s domestic television. All the same it’s disappointing to see such hard work by so many involved obviously handed off to someone much less fastidious at the eleventh hour for authoring the DVDs. It should be stressed, however, that the Blu-Ray and Steelbook don’t share this flaw so, if it’s going to bother you, those are the routes to take. The cover art, some may remember, was the cause of a bit of a social media flap last year when Clayton Hickman’s distinctive and unusual scarf patterned cover was ditched at the comparative last minute. In the final result, Lee Binding’s replacement is… fine, if a little bland and stilted seeming, probably as a result of the tight deadlines under which it was done. Strangely, a vestige of Hickman’s original design lingers on in the insert booklet.  “Bland” is not something anyone could accuse the Steelbook art of. Undoubtedly DWM’s most marmite love-him-or-hate-him artists, Adrian Salmon provides a cover piece in his distinctive, angular, impressionistic style. Personally, I love him. A thread long dangling frustratingly at the corner of Doctor Who history, Shada is reborn by a massive and dedicated effort by a hugely talented team to reveal it as an all time classic mix of Douglas Adams’ trademark whimsy and intelligence. Handsomely accompanied by a great set of extras and marred only by some inexplicable technical sloppiness, this is a must for any collection. But one, perhaps, to get on Blu-Ray if possible.   http://reviews.doctorwhonews.net/2018/02/shada_dvd_blu_ray_steelbook.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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companionsofthedoctor · 8 years ago
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The Companions’ Guide to Doctor Who Podcasts (8th May 2017)
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In what we hope will be a weekly roundup, Companions of the Doctor brings you a list of Doctor Who podcasts that were published the week and weekend before. This is by no means a complete or exhaustive list, but the podcasts listed are representative of those recommended and/or subscribed to by the Companions of the Doctor staff.  If you don’t see your favorite Doctor Who podcast listed, just let us know via the form or email on our Contact Us page. Be sure to leave a link to the podcast, and we’ll try to add it next week.
All podcasts and content belong to their respective owners. Companions of the Doctor is not responsible for any of the podcast content you hear, and some podcasts contain content that may not be safe for work.
Latest Podcast Episodes:
Two-minute Time Lord: 2MTL 423: Because There Are (No) Limits
Doctor Who: Podshock: 339 - The Pilot Reviewed
TARDISblend: 103: Knock Knock
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: EPISODE 321 - Doctor Who 'Knock, Knock' Review (Spoilers!)
Doctor Who: Radio Free Skaro:  #581 – Is There A Doctor In The House?
Who Back When - A Doctor Who Podcast: N055 Journey’s End
Flight Through Entirety: Episode 109: Dark Colours
Theta Sigma's Doctor Who Podcast:  Episode 193 Knock Knock
TeeVee’s Doctor Who Flashcast: 247 Doctor Who Season 10 Episode 4 Review: “Knock Knock”
The Sonic Toolbox: Episode 234 - Knock Knock - Review
The Doctor Who Show: S10E04 Knock Knock (Doctor Who Series 10)
Big Finish Podcast: 2017-05-08 Capitol II Doctor Who Convention
Tim’s Take On: Episode 382 (Doctor Who Limerick Book review/Doctor Who Knock Knock review)
The Doctor Who Show: You and Who Talking 006 
Staggering Stories Podcast: Staggering Stories Podcast #262: We Are Pete
Gallifrey Stands Podcast: Gallifrey Stands - Ep160 - The 3 Doctors
The Untempered Schism Podcast:  Untempered Schism Podcast #161: Kinda
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 663 Torchwood - 14 The Dolls House from @BigFinish
Outpost Skaro Podcast:  Episode 120 – On even thinner ice than normal
The Ood Cast: The Ood One Out – Thin Ice
WHO 37 - A Doctor Who Podcast:  #104 $#!+ting Bricks
The Big Blue Box Podcast:  Doctor Who - Ep140: Skating on thin ice
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: Cultdom Commentary: Doctor Who – Thin Ice
Debating Doctor Who: Episode 56: “Thin Ice”
Traveling the Vortex: Episode 328 – No Luxury For Outrage
Wanderers in the 4th Dimension: Episode 267: Thin Ice
Doctor Whooch: Episode 111 - European Pie Culture
Discussing Who:  Episode 44 – Review of Thin Ice, Doctor Who Series 10 Episode 3
The Doctor Who Show : Letter Lords – DWM #511 MAY 2017
Earth Station Who: The Earth Station Who Podcast Episode 155 – Thin Ice
BeyondKasterborous - PodKast with a K:  Is Doctor Who on Thin Ice? Or is Series 10 Hot Stuff?
The Impossible Girls Podcast: Episode #60: Thin Ice, Hot Topics
Gallifrey Public Radio: Thin Ice
Verity! Podcast: Episode 135 – Thin Ice, Ice, Baby
MarkWHO42: Episode 180 – Blue Ice
Arrow of Time Podcast: 131 – The Creature Underneath
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 666: TV DOCTOR WHO 2017 EP03 Thin Ice
Progtor WHO:  EPISODE 81: THIN ICE review
Mutter’s Spiral Podcast: MUTTER’S SPIRAL Podcast 127 – “Thin Ice”
This Week in Time Travel:  5: Punching Down
Who’s He? Podcast:  #267 - If you should go skating
The Podcastica: Episode 89: Thin Ice OR Punch All the Racists!
The 20mb Doctor Who Podcast: Episode #339
Zeus Plug: Thin Ice 
TARDISblend: 102 Thin Ice
Previous Week(s)
The Pharos Project Podcast: Pharos Project 211: Gone With the Grinned
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: Episode 320 – Doctor Who ‘Thin Ice’ Review (Spoilers!)
Doctor Who: The BLUE BOX Podcast:   EPISODE 255 - Thin Ice on Solid Ground
Who Back When - A Doctor Who Podcast: N054 The Stolen Earth
The Doctor Who Show: 2.4 The Doctor Who Show (April 30, 2017)
Terminus: A Doctor Who Podcast: Episode 25 – Starchild!: The Pilot
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 664: Doctor Who Main Range 224 - Alien Heart Dalek Soul from @bigfinish 
TARDIS Tavern: Episode 161: This Be Scringestone 
42 to Doomsday: Episode 66 - Top 5 Underrated Monsters 
Reality Bomb - A Doctor Who Podcast: Reality Bomb Episode 045 
Diddly Dum Podcast:  075 – The Reverse Gaiman 
Zeus Plug: ZEUS PLUG vs ANDREW ELLARD 
Mostly Harmless Cutaway: MHC #146 Smile 10.2 [Raw]
New To Who: Episode 1 - Terror of the Zygons
Who and Company: Episode 4 - Pilots of the Convention Circuit
Doctor Who: The Writer’s Room: Episode 49 - The End of Hartnell
Two-minute Time Lord: 2MTL 422: HOLD MY BEER.
On The Time Lash Podcast: 53. Whippy Tongue
The Minute Doctor Who Podcast: 104 – Matthew Dale
Get Off My World Podcast: UPDATE: Now back online as of 8th May, new episodes are expected to appear mid-May. In the meantime, keep checking their Facebook page for continued updates.
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ink-and-dagger · 3 years ago
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So i saw in the ao3 count that DWM has a few chapters left. Just curious: are you sticking with this, or is there gonna be some adjustments to the number of chapters?
Also, on a side note, I see that you are a fellow Viktor simp. Have you considered writing a fic/fics about him?
Yes, DWM will have 18 chapters total in the main story. I’ve temporarily removed the total chapter count because there’s a tiiiiiny possibility it might tick down to 17. But if I can make it through writing chapter 15 how it’s currently planned then it will definitely be 18 total.
Again, yes. Absolutely. I have a long fic mostly plotted for him, and a few one shot ideas. I struggle to write too many things at once, which is why I haven’t posted much else other than DWM content. But once DWM is done I want to crank out a few one-shots before I start another long project, and I’m determined to get some Viktor in there.
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companionsofthedoctor · 8 years ago
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The Companions’ Guide to Doctor Who Podcasts (22nd May 2017)
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In our weekly roundup, Companions of the Doctor brings you a list of Doctor Who podcasts that were published the week and weekend before. This is by no means a complete or exhaustive list, but the podcasts listed are representative of those recommended and/or subscribed to by the Companions of the Doctor staff. If you don’t see your favorite Doctor Who podcast listed, just let us know via the form or email on our Contact Us page. Be sure to leave a link to the podcast, and we’ll try to add it next week.
All podcasts and content belong to their respective owners. Companions of the Doctor is not responsible for any of the podcast content you hear, and some podcasts contain content that may not be safe for work.
Latest Podcast Episodes:
Who and Company:  Episode 5 - Jeremy Radick & The Prisoner
TARDISblend: 105: Extremis
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: EPISODE 323 - Doctor Who 'Extremis' Review (Spoilers!)
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: EPISODE 322 - Doctor Who 'Oxygen' Review (Spoilers!)
Doctor Who: Radio Free Skaro:  #583 – The Meddling Monks
Who Back When - A Doctor Who Podcast: C056 The Mind of Evil
Flight Through Entirety: Episode 111: Gallifreyan Duck and Cover
BeyondKasterborous - PodKast with a K:  275: Extremis, Doctor Who Series 10's First Misfire?  
Theta Sigma's Doctor Who Podcast:  Episode 195 Extremis 
Lazy Doctor Who: The War Machines 3-4 (Episode 88)
Doctor Who: 42 To Doomsday: Episode 67 - Continuity Capers!
New To Who: Episode 2 - The Terror of the Autons
The Doctor Who Show: S10E06 Extremis (Doctor Who Series 10)
Doctor Who: Podshock: 340 - Smile Reviewed
TeeVee’s Doctor Who Flashcast: 255 Doctor Who S10E6 Review: “Extremis”
Tim’s Take On: Tim's Take On: Episode 384 (Doctor Who Extremis review)
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 668: 4th Doctor Phillip Hinchcliffe Presents Helm of Awe from @BigFinish 
The Doctor Who Show: You and Who Talking 008
Staggering Stories Podcast: Staggering Stories Podcast #263: Musical Helmets
The Untempered Schism Podcast: Untempered Schism Podcast #162: Silver Nemesis
The Ood Cast: The Ood One Out – Oxygen
Gallifrey Stands Podcast: Gallifrey Stands -Ep162- Props to Mark Cordory
The Big Blue Box Podcast:  Doctor Who - Ep142: Take My Breath Away  
The Pharos Project Podcast: Pharos Project 214: Con Air
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: Cultdom Commentary: Doctor Who – Oxygen
Wanderers in the 4th Dimension: Episode 269: Oxygen
Doctor Whooch: Episode 113 - Nothing Bad Ever Happens In Space
Arrow of Time Podcast: 133 – Morals and Bleakness
The Flashing Blade Podcast S2: The Flashing Blade Podcast Series 2 Episode 6 
The Impossible Girls Podcast: Episode #62: I Can’t Look At Anything EVER AGAIN
BeyondKasterborous - PodKast with a K:  274: Oxygen, a Blindingly Good Doctor Who!
MarkWHO42: Episode 182 – “When Amelia met Jamie”
Verity! Podcast: Episode 137 – Team of Oxygen
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 671: TV DOCTOR WHO 2017 EP05 Oxygen
Zeus Plug: Oxygen
Theta Sigma's Doctor Who Podcast:  SPECIAL EDITION Questions from the Vault
Earth Station Who: Earth Station Who Podcast Episode 157 – Oxygen 
Discussing Who: Episode 47: Review of Oxygen, Doctor Who Series 10 Episode 5   
Gallifrey Public Radio: Oxygen
Progtor WHO: EPISODE 83: OXYGEN review
The 20MB Doctor Who Podcast: Episode #341 Oxygen
Traveling the Vortex: Episode 330 – Plot Holes For Days
Who’s He? Podcast: #269 A lack of oxygen from my life support
This Week in Time Travel: We Didn't See That Coming (Episode 7)
Debating Doctor Who: Episode 58: “Oxygen” 
Doctor Who: The BLUE BOX Podcast: EPISODE 257 - The Oxygen That We Breathe
Mutter’s Spiral Podcast: MUTTER’S SPIRAL Podcast 129 – “Oxygen”
The Podcastica: Episode 91: Oxygen OR Tell Me a Joke Before You Go Go
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 672: Mark Wright Interview 
Doctor Who: The Writer’s Room: Episode 50(!) - The Cybermen part 1
I'll Explain Later: a Doctor Who podcast: Episode 23 - Down In A Tube Station At Midnight
Previous Week(s)
TARDIS Tavern: Episode 162: DFW Whofest and an Evening with Mark Strickson 
Doctor Who: The Krynoid PodCast: Episode 093: The Macra Terror 
Staggering Stories Podcast: Staggering Stories Commentary #191: Doctor Who – The Pilot 
The Sonic Toolbox: Episode 235: Oxygen - Review 
Tim’s Take On: Tim's Take On: Episode 383 (Doctor Who Oxygen review)
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 667: The Shape of Things to Come From @bigfinish  
WHO 37 - A Doctor Who Podcast:  #105 Treehouse of Horror  
Diddly Dum Podcast:  076 – Topping Up The Soul 
Discussing Who: Episode 46: WHOLanta 2017 Recap and Review
Get Off My World Podcast: Episode 46: Wanna Do Some Ben And Polly?
Two-minute Time Lord: 2MTL 423: Because There Are (No) Limits 
Outpost Skaro Podcast:  Episode 120 – On even thinner ice than normal 
The Doctor Who Show : Letter Lords – DWM #511 MAY 2017
Who Back When - A Doctor Who Podcast: N054 The Stolen Earth
The Doctor Who Show: 2.4 The Doctor Who Show (April 30, 2017)
Terminus: A Doctor Who Podcast: Episode 25 – Starchild!: The Pilot
Reality Bomb - A Doctor Who Podcast: Reality Bomb Episode 045
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companionsofthedoctor · 8 years ago
Text
The Companions’ Guide to Doctor Who Podcasts (15th May 2017)
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In our weekly roundup, Companions of the Doctor brings you a list of Doctor Who podcasts that were published the week and weekend before. This is by no means a complete or exhaustive list, but the podcasts listed are representative of those recommended and/or subscribed to by the Companions of the Doctor staff. If you don’t see your favorite Doctor Who podcast listed, just let us know via the form or email on our Contact Us page. Be sure to leave a link to the podcast, and we’ll try to add it next week.
All podcasts and content belong to their respective owners. Companions of the Doctor is not responsible for any of the podcast content you hear, and some podcasts contain content that may not be safe for work.
Latest Podcast Episodes:
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 672: Mark Wright Interview 
TeeVee’s Doctor Who Flashcast: 250 Doctor Who S10E5 Review: “Oxygen”
Doctor Who: The Writer’s Room: Episode 50(!) - The Cybermen part 1
I'll Explain Later: a Doctor Who podcast: Episode 23 - Down In A Tube Station At Midnight
TARDISblend: 104: Oxygen
TARDIS Tavern: Episode 162: DFW Whofest and an Evening with Mark Strickson
Doctor Who: Radio Free Skaro:  #582 – Every Breath You Take
Doctor Who: The Krynoid PodCast: Episode 093: The Macra Terror
Flight Through Entirety: Episode 110: The Demeter Seed Game
Staggering Stories Podcast: Staggering Stories Commentary #191: Doctor Who – The Pilot
Theta Sigma's Doctor Who Podcast:  Episode 194 Oxygen 
The Doctor Who Show: S10E05 Oxygen (Doctor Who Series 10)
The Sonic Toolbox: Episode 235: Oxygen - Review
Tim’s Take On: Tim's Take On: Episode 383 (Doctor Who Oxygen review)
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 667: The Shape of Things to Come From @Bigfinish 
Gallifrey Stands Podcast: Gallifrey Stands - Ep161 - SFW8: Daphne Ashbrook
The Doctor Who Show: You and Who Talking 007
WHO 37 - A Doctor Who Podcast:  #105 Treehouse of Horror 
The Pharos Project Podcast: Pharos Project 213: Woodfellas
Diddly Dum Podcast:  076 – Topping Up The Soul
The Ood Cast: The Ood One Out – Knock Knock
Discussing Who: Episode 46: WHOLanta 2017 Recap and Review
Get Off My World Podcast: Episode 46: Wanna Do Some Ben And Polly?
The Big Blue Box Podcast:  Doctor Who - Ep141: Who's There? Creepy Landlord
The Flashing Blade Podcast S2: The Flashing Blade Podcast Series 2 Episode 5
Wanderers in the 4th Dimension: Episode 268: Knock Knock
Doctor Whooch: Episode 113 - Y'All Basic
Earth Station Who: The Earth Station Who Podcast Episode 156 – Knock Knock
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: Cultdom Commentary: Doctor Who – Knock, Knock
The Impossible Girls Podcast: Episode #61: Who’s There?
MarkWHO42: Episode 181 – WHO’s There?
Arrow of Time Podcast: 132 – Something Mildly Irritating This Way Comes
Verity! Podcast: Episode 136 – Knock Knock, Who’s Here.
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 670: TV DOCTOR WHO 2017 EP04 - Knock Knock
Discussing Who: Episode 45: Review of Knock Knock, Doctor Who Series 10 Episode 4
Doctor Who: The BLUE BOX Podcast: Episode 256 : Knock Knock is Who There
Progtor WHO: Ep 82: KNOCK KNOCK review
The Podcastica: Episode 90: Knock Knock OR Tropes Aplenty!
Traveling the Vortex: Episode 329 – Open the Door
Who’s He? Podcast: #268 I can hear your music playin'
Earth Station Who: Earth Station Who Podcast Special 2017 – What I Have Learned From Doctor Who
This Week in Time Travel: Bugs in the System (Episode 6)
Gallifrey Public Radio: Knock Knock
The Pharos Project Podcast: Pharos Project 212: Orphan Snack 
Debating Doctor Who: Episode 57: “Knock Knock”
Mutter’s Spiral Podcast: MUTTER’S SPIRAL Podcast 128 – “Knock Knock”
The 20mb Doctor Who Podcast: Episode #340
Previous Week(s)
Two-minute Time Lord: 2MTL 423: Because There Are (No) Limits
Doctor Who: Podshock: 339 - The Pilot Reviewed
The Cultdom Collective Podcast: EPISODE 321 - Doctor Who 'Knock, Knock' Review (Spoilers!) 
Who Back When - A Doctor Who Podcast: N055 Journey’s End
Big Finish Podcast: 2017-05-08 Capitol II Doctor Who Convention
Staggering Stories Podcast: Staggering Stories Podcast #262: We Are Pete
The Untempered Schism Podcast: Untempered Schism Podcast #161: Kinda
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 663 Torchwood - 14 The Dolls House from @BigFinish
Outpost Skaro Podcast:  Episode 120 – On even thinner ice than normal
The Ood Cast: The Ood One Out – Thin Ice
Wanderers in the 4th Dimension: Episode 267: Thin Ice
The Doctor Who Show : Letter Lords – DWM #511 MAY 2017
BeyondKasterborous - PodKast with a K:  Is Doctor Who on Thin Ice? Or is Series 10 Hot Stuff? 
Zeus Plug: Thin Ice
Who Back When - A Doctor Who Podcast: N054 The Stolen Earth
The Doctor Who Show: 2.4 The Doctor Who Show (April 30, 2017)
Terminus: A Doctor Who Podcast: Episode 25 – Starchild!: The Pilot
Tin Dog Podcast: TDP 664: Doctor Who Main Range 224 - Alien Heart Dalek Soul from @bigfinish 
42 to Doomsday: Episode 66 - Top 5 Underrated Monsters
Reality Bomb - A Doctor Who Podcast: Reality Bomb Episode 045
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