I have asked a couple of times in the threads where folks ask for information on something and they include "ISO" in the title. They either blew me off thinking I was making fun of them (Me? Never! :mrgreen or just never saw it. In all seriousness what do you mean when you use this string of letters? Such as in today's post - ISO: Seamstress/someone who sews (with a Serger) or also recently -ISO Plastic Vampire Teeth Thanks Hught
My first thought was also ISO=International Organization for Standardization so you're not a weirdo, you just spend too much time at work! I work in manufacturing so you spend a good deal of the day hip-deep in techspeak...ISO, UL, CE, TUV, ANSI, JSO, SAE, CAD, CST, CAM, FEA, MTBF, DXF, IGES, UG, CNC, HTD, XL, MXL, BOM, BOL, FOB, COTS, YRMV...
im in the airline biz. everything is a 3 letter code in our biz. airport codes, city codes, policy and procedure stuff. fyi...iso is the airport code for kinston nc. in case you ever need to know.:jester: db's wife oh and dont feel bad. i didnt know what it meant either. but im really ignorant of these lil codes on the computer.
Yep, I understand, I have been on 94 airplanes so far this year and just booked for AUS this morning. In addition like Mr. Pyle I have all the aerospace, automotive and chemical industry acronyms (PPAP, PFMEA, DFMEA, MSA, AIAG, etcetera) I sometimes wish we didn't always fallback on these shortcuts.
The text speech?? I do too, my soon to be 11 year old (who has no phone) answered a question this morning as "I" "D" "K". Smarty pants.
As my company is ISO certified that is the first thing that pops into my head when I see the letters I.S.O