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University of Oxford

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Andre Bertolace

University of Oxford

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Posted By Andre Bertolace 05-28-2026 10:47 AM
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Hi Christian Very true. What stands out to me is that planning and scheduling become much more than a process once a site is under pressure. That is usually where you see the real coordination challenge, especially when backlog, emergency work, manpower limits, and production priorities all start competing. ...
Posted By Andre Bertolace 05-28-2026 10:41 AM
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Hi Miguel, That's really interesting. It is a very clear picture of how the flow works in practice, especially the way monitoring, SAP, prioritization, and manpower availability all interact. What stands out to me most is the bottleneck you mentioned, where stoppage work starts crowding out the monitored ...
Posted By Andre Bertolace 05-27-2026 02:05 PM
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Absolutely. Training plays an important role, but what you said really gets at something I've seen a lot. Once each area has its own priorities, it naturally starts to create competing demands, silos, and firefighting mode. That usually happens not out of bad intent, but simply because of how the pressure ...
Posted By Andre Bertolace 05-27-2026 08:01 AM
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Hi Adilan, I suspect the most successful use cases in the near term will be the ones tied to very concrete operational pain points rather than broad "AI transformation" initiatives. Things like inspections, repetitive field tasks, maintenance planning support, or reducing operational firefighting ...
Posted By Andre Bertolace 05-27-2026 07:25 AM
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Hi Caleb, I liked your point about building a structured reliability function across the site, not just developing individual technical skills. I've been thinking a lot about how reliability engineers learn once the rubber meets the road (when backlog, emergency work, production pressure, and resource ...