|
Optimize Economic and Technological Requirements in Production System Designs
This pioneering work offers proven techniques, partially created and developed at The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, for determining optimal resource allocation and cost-effective production system designs for today’s any-volume manufacturing environments. Production Systems Engineering presents a unique methodology that synthesizes applicable technology with economic requirements for an integrated solution. Featuring real-world case studies, this authoritative resource establishes a new paradigm for the manufacturing world that can also be applied to other enterprise environments.
Coverage includes:
-
Determining an improved manufacturing system design method
-
System design basics, time allocation, resources, costs, and quality rating
-
Stochastic analyses added to deterministic results
-
System configuration options
-
Multiple disparate products produced by one system
-
World class versus mostly manual systems
-
Determining allowable investment
-
Simultaneous improvement in yield and cycle-time
|
|
|
Handbook of Ambient Intelligence and Smart EnvironmentsAmbient Intelligence (AmI) has recently been adopted as a term referring to a multidisciplinary subject which embraces a variety of pre-existing fields of computer science and engineering. Given the diversity of potential applications this relationship naturally extends to other areas of science, such as education, health and social care,... | | Automotive Battery Technology (SpringerBriefs in Applied Sciences and Technology)
The use of electrochemical energy storage systems in automotive applications also involves new requirements for modeling these systems, especially in terms of model depth and model quality. Currently, mainly simple application-oriented models are used to describe the physical behavior of batteries. This book provides a step beyond of... | | The New How: Creating Business Solutions Through Collaborative Strategy
During my nearly 20 years in business, both as an employee and as a trusted advisor to companies, I’ve seen what you’ve seen: strategies designed to win are commonly announced with fanfare, but they rarely live up to the ambitions and predictions of their advocates.
Sometimes they’re modestly successful, and any... |
|