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White Papers
Abstracts
TITLE
Tool Interoperability:
A Next Generation Approach to Building Engineering Environments
Tool interfaces challenge designers of engineering environments.
Often users must adapt their engineering and business processes
to make interfaces possible. Even when processes are stretched
to the limits of user tolerance, file-based bridges are seldom
better than barely satisfactory. The new generation of client-server
tools with open application development interfaces enable an
interoperability and integration paradigm in which tools cooperate
seamlessly as clients to each other or as servers to a new breed
of shared clients.
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TITLE
Redesign Cost Avoidance Using System Engineering
BY
Jim Helm
Mobile Satellite Communications Division,
MOTOROLA INC.
R. T. Cantrell
A system engineering approach was used for development of the
Motorola space-based cellular network called IRIDIUM®. Significant
cost reductions were realized using requirements analysis and
management along with system engineering team processes. Statistics
show a 40 to 1 reduction in development time due to team requirements
inspections. Due to their general nature, these system engineering
processes are easily transportable to any project with a development
phase.
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This paper was voted the best in the Processes
& Methods section of INCOSE 1997.
TITLE
Requirements Consistency
-A Basis For Design Quality-
BY
F. Scott Van Dewerker
Motorola SATCOM
Stuart T. Booth
Large design projects have a significant challenge to maintain
consistent quality specifications throughout the development
life cycle. The cost of maintaining such specifications and
ensuring their consistency is high, and if not performed adequately
can pose a significant risk to the program by inducing errors
into the design. This paper presents methods for automation
in concert with a process that will effectively reduce the inconsistencies
in specifications.
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TITLE
Integrating Concurrent Tool Set
BY
Jane McKennon
With the availability of commercial tools to automate the many
different phases of the system life cycle, users are faced with
the problem of integrating the information produced by one tool
with the information required by another. The current state
of the practice is for users to create paper or electronic document-based
bridges between tools. The challenge is to create an integrated
concurrent engineering tool set using engineering models, rather
than documents, to transfer design information. An examination
of the issues raised by integrating engineering tools leads
to the conclusion that complete integration cannot be achieved
by external mechanisms such as backplanes or by unilateral modifications
to a single tool. Integrating multiple engineering tools requires
changes to all tools.
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TITLE
A Process Driven Approach to Integrated Environments
BY
Jane McKennon
A process driven approach allows construction of integrated
concurrent engineering tool environments based on the tool requirements
of the tasks to be performed on a program. Tool capabilities
can be matched to task requirements and the semantics of tool
to tool bridges can be derived from process semantics. Finally,
the process can be tuned to take optimal advantage of the integration
capabilities of the tools. Two examples show how very different
bridges are needed between the same two tools in the context
of two different processes.
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