MBA: Supply Chain and Operation management
Instructors: Navdeep Yadav6 sections 36 lectures 3h 52m total lengthVideo: MP4 1280x720 44 KHz | English + SubUpdated 5/2022 | Size: 3.6 GB

Tactics, Tools, and Techniques required to become a Supply chain and operation manager

Aims and Objectives of a good Supply Chain
Distribution Levels in a supply chain
Bullwhip effect in supply chain
Sales and Operation Planning
Horizontal Vs Vertical Supply chain
Backward and forward integration
OEM (Original equipment manufacturer)
Private label and White label manufacturer
supply chain case study

Basic knowledge of logistics and supply chain operations and teology.

SCCM/MECM Administration - Be an 'Expert'!
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHzLanguage: English | Size: 6.26 GB | Duration: 8h 41m

Destination to Learn-Administer-Troubleshoot: Architecture, Upgrade, Patching, Application & OS Deployment - MECM/SCCM

What you'll learn
A very deep insight into the different modules and aspects of SCCM (System Center Configuration Manager)
Building a fully functional SCCM environment
Upgrading different current branch versions of SCCM
SCCM Administration concepts
Building sites, distribution points and troubleshooting the errors
A complete explanation of application deployment via SCCM with the entire log flow example
A complete explanation of patch deployment via SCCM with the entire log flow example
Third party patching solutions
Operating system deployments with all the logs involved
Requirements
Basic windows administration.

Jose Raul Capablanca: Most instructive chess games 1901-1918
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHzLanguage: English | Size: 30.4 GB | Duration: 30h 23m

Chess Strategy and Tactics of arguably one of the strongest and most talented natural players of all

What you'll learn
Ability to play "simple positional chess" and reduce complexity
Ability to appreciate Chess "Fundamentals" ( independent insights) that Capablanca was gifted with at very young age - he never opened a book on Openings :)
Ability to appreciate Boris Spassky's view that Capablanca was the best player of all
Ability to improve and appreciate endgame play
Ability to enrich positional judgement
Ability to appreciate simple positions more
Ability to use aggressive tactical play to drive home positional advantages providing it is safe and efficient to do so
Ability to appreciate Capablanca's influence on future world champions Bobby Fischer and Anatoly Karpov
Ability to pick up Colle-Zukertort model games - a great attacking system for White
Ability to appreciate why Capablanca was nicknamed "The Cuban Morphy" after his match with Frank Marshall in 1909
Ability to improve endgame transitions well in advance by accurate middlegame play and understanding of endgames
Ability to see major King safety prophylaxis especially when playing against attacking players like Frank Marshall
Ability to understand more what Bobby Fischer alluded to about Capablanca in terms of middlegame accuracy to get winning endgames in the first place on arrival
Ability to improve locking down counterplay in endgame - freezing pawns and opponent's King with virtual walls
Ability to appreciate Capablanca's influence on future World champions an Petrosian and Anatoly Karpov in terms of positional play and prophylaxis
Ability to win with minimal opening imbalances - so winning in effect with minimal risks in opening taken
Ability to make use of very tiny advantages from minimal imbalance openings to still try and win
Ability to improve opening theory and tiny advantage independence - still being able to win with minimal sharp theory or tiny advantages
Ability to transcend if-then style analysis in favour of knowing endgame wins, exploiting passed pawns and higher goals
Ability to appreciate the amazing tactical abilities of Capablanca as well as his legendary positional and endgame skills
Ability to appreciate Capablanca's use of opening "systems" like the Colle System to get good opening positions and use middlegame and endgame strengths to win
Ability to appreciate the strengths of the three knights and four knight variations which Capablanca nearly one third of in preference to Ruy Lopez
Ability to appreciate the "Old Indian" defence but also the "Old Indian" attack with White as a solid system
Ability to simplify with advantage from complex positions using Capablanca's excellent examples
Ability to appreciate Capablanca's alertness in opening phase for nuanced advantage gaining opportunities despite claiming not to have read many chess books
Ability to appreciate Capablanca often playing against two weaknesses or targets to overwhelm opponents in Endgames
Ability to appreciate the humanity of Capablanca - somes missing Back rank tactical resources in the middlegame
Ability to appreciate Capablanca's ability to see many of the little 'petit' combinations and tactical shots hidden in complex positions
Ability to appreciate in-depth some key game examples in Capablanca's "Chess Fundamentals" as many games are from this course's date range
Ability to be inspired for major endgame themes such as Aggressive King, Rook on 7th, power of passed pawns and their hooks, Switching attacks, etc
Ability to see Capablanca as brilliant in middlegame and tactics especially x-ray tactics as well as a virtuoso in endgame play
Ability to see key turning points and mistakes of games - not just telling the story of games but trying to get an objective analysis of where things went wrong
Ability to make use of Capablanca's level of pedanticness even in opening moves to extend knowledge of Opening theory and give a modern perspective
Ability to emulate Capablanca more than more complex world champions because of his apparent simplicity, elegance and desire to keep positions relatively simple
Ability to strengthen middlegame evaluations even losing a piece when put in context of powerful endgame transitions where passed pawns are dangerous
Ability to appreciate a positional style which Kasparov indicates that Magnus Carlsen is similar to
Ability to appreciate why Capablanca is thought to be one of the most naturally talented players of all
Ability to improve endgame strength and middlegame to endgame transitions which is becoming a rarer commodity skill in today's blitz chess and end scrambles
Ability to appreciate that an Encyclopedic opening repertoire is not needed to be a top player - Capablanca showed that he could play quiet but sound openings
Ability to appreciate super instructive chess games where every idea has high visibility, and clarity.

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