Component-Based Software Engineering: Putting the Pieces Together
June 5, 2010 by RealEngineer.com · 4 Comments
Product Description
Software components are increasingly central to efficient, cost-effective software development. In this book, the world’s leading experts on component software development come together to present the field’s state of the art, and to offer new insights into the key challenges of component architecture and reuse. With original contributions by leaders such as Ivar Jacobson, Martin Griss, Len Bass, Paul Clements, Don Reifer, and Will Tracz, this carefully edited book is the “first word” on components: a tool for helping practitioners get the most out of all their component-based resources. It offers new insight for deciding whether and how to implement component-based development strategies; as well as a clear understanding of the obstacles to successful component development, and “best practices” responses. The contributors review diverse approaches to component development, present state-of-the-art processes for building component-based systems, and introduce new research directions that will impact component development in the coming decade. For software developers, designers and architects; business analysts; technology executives; computer science and software engineering researchers; project managers; QA specialists, and other professionals.
Component-Based Software Engineering: Putting the Pieces Together
Free Cad Software Download
June 4, 2010 by RealEngineer.com · Leave a Comment
The free CAD software from www.emachineshop.com is intelligent software that allows you to create your own design and also check whether the design can be machined — all at the click of your mouse. The software has been designed to be easily used by beginners and powerful enough for professional engineers. Informative prompts and 3D views of parts being designed contribute to ease of use. To get started designing parts and having them built by eMachineShop, all you need to do is download the free CAD software from eMachineShop. The software begins as a 3D CAD program but also incorporates an automated machinist expert to advise you on fine points of design, instant pricing for a wide range of materials and processes and order processing with order tracking.
While most CAD Software packages are designed to create general geometric shapes without regard for manufacturability, price, or setting up real jobs for ordering, the eMachineShop free CAD software was designed from the ground up to serve all these functions in a seamless yet-powerful package. The price quotation portion of the software download allows you to select the best price and order delivery option for your requirements. Even the shipping cost is automatically calculated by the software.
eMachineShop does not review designs for applicability to a given design problem, but encourages customers to download the easy-to-use software and determine for themselves whether eMachineShop can meet their needs. A one-off part for a new invention may be less tightly engineered than a comparatively more exotic aerospace part in a mission critical application.
At www.emachineshop.com simple jobs on simple machines generally start at around $150 for setup and as low as $1 per part (or even lower) for simple parts run in quantity. eMachineShop is competitive on most types of parts – in small or large quantity.
With eMachineShop a single command in the software gives you a price instantly. There is no time wasted in gathering price quotations. Potential customers of eMachineShop simply draw or import the design and receive their instant price quote.
Investing just a few minutes to download the cad cam software will allow you to discover an exciting new tool which can be used in many ways. Inventors, professional product designers, engineers, and even hobbyists agree on this point. The free CAD software allows for ordering by all major credit cards, PayPal, check or money order. Assistance is always just a click away.
George is a well-known author who writes on the topics related with free CAD software, cnc machine shop and waterjet cutting for the site www.emachineshop.com.
Software Product Lines in Action: The Best Industrial Practice in Product Line Engineering
June 4, 2010 by RealEngineer.com · Leave a Comment
Product Description
Software product lines represent perhaps the most exciting paradigm shift in software development since the advent of high-level programming languages. Nowhere else in software engineering have we seen such breathtaking improvements in cost, quality, time to market, and developer productivity, often registering in the order-of-magnitude range. While the underlying concepts are straightforward enough – building a family of related products or systems by planned and careful reuse of a base of generalized software development assets – the devil can be in the details, as successful product line practice can involve organizational change, business process change, and technology change.
The authors ideally combine academic research results with industrial real-world experiences, thus presenting a broad view on product line engineering so that both managers and technical specialists will benefit from reading it. After presenting a common framework for the description of the industrial case studies, they capture the wealth of knowledge that eight companies have gathered during the introduction of the software product line engineering approach in their daily practice. After reading this book, you will understand all the relevant aspects, regarding business, architecture, process, and organizational issues, of applying software product line engineering. If you consider using a product line approach in your organization, or if you want to improve your current practices you will find a rich set of useful information at your fingertips – from practitioners to practitioners.
Software Product Lines in Action: The Best Industrial Practice in Product Line Engineering
Apriori Ceo Frank Azzolino Profiles Engineering and Finance Issues in the Insider
June 4, 2010 by RealEngineer.com · Leave a Comment
The holy grail of ‘collaboration’ is meaningless if the parties are not speaking a common language. The ‘lingua franca’ that translates the language of engineering into the language of business is ‘cost’, specifically, product cost.
In the current issue of The Insider found at www.accountingsoftware411.com, Frank Azzolino, CEO of aPriori Technologies discusses how the business operations focus is on financially related concerns such as margin, contribution, and profit. The language of the business is time and money. It is no secret that the profit motive is what drives critical company decisions. It is also no secret that the ability for the product to achieve the expected financial goals is driven by design and manufacturing decisions that occur very early in (and continually throughout) the product delivery process.
MCAD and PLM have historically focused on the engineering and design aspects of product delivery. The language of engineering as spoken by MCAD and PLM is based on physical attributes of the product and technological capabilities of the software solutions used. The result is a series of conversations about features, rounds, fillets, and chamfers.
Major PLM and MCAD providers long for acceptance and penetration outside of engineering departments at the same time the major ERP (enterprise resource planning) vendors strive to enter the engineering and product delivery arena.
In each of these application platforms, PLM and ERP, cost can be managed. On the ERP side, costs are always historical; these costs are available to be managed only after production. While it is more difficult to manage costs on the PLM side of the house, it is often potentially more valuable. The need for real- time, predictive costs are essential to allow design and manufacturing teams to avoid and eliminate costs early in the process (when critical cost-driving decisions are made.) Currently the array of MCAD, PLM, and ERP applications do not allow for the ability to generate this early cost knowledge.
The aPriori v4.0 Cost Management Software Platform provides real-time, predictive cost assessments throughout the entire product development and delivery process. aPriori v4.0 enables designers and engineers, manufacturing engineers and planners, purchasing and sourcing professionals, cost managers, and program/project management to make better decisions to reduce, avoid, and recover product costs. aPriori’s solutions enable manufacturing companies to measurably reduce their Costs-of-Goods Sold (COGS) by whole percentages by identifying quantifiable savings in material, tooling, labor and overhead while evaluating alternative designs, manufacturing processes, and vendor sources.
About aPriori
Based in Concord, MA, aPriori is the technology leader providing innovative cost management solutions to the discrete manufacturing industry. aPriori’s Cost Management Software Platform enables manufacturers to better understand product cost decisions early and throughout the product lifecycle. aPriori’s Cost Management Platform empowers manufacturers to lower cost-of-goods sold (COGS), provides real-time visibility to “cost-critical” decision information, and builds critical cost knowledge to go on the business “offensive.” aPriori’s patented cost management platform allows companies to assess, control, and reduce cost of goods sold by whole percentages. The aPriori Platform truly enables “Cost Knowledge Before it Matters.”
“aPriori has customers in a variety of industries including High Technology, Industrial Equipment, Automotive, and Heavy Machinery. Recent customers include John Deere, Panasonic, Thomas & Betts, Flextronics, JLG, and Dana Corporation.”
aPriori
www.aPriori.com
Nate Kalowski
Communications Director
pr@apriori.com
978-371-2006
Microcontrollers and Microcomputers Principles of Software and Hardware Engineering
June 2, 2010 by RealEngineer.com · 2 Comments
Product Description
Microcontrollers and Microcomputers: Principles of Software and Hardware Engineering, Second Edition, is an ideal introductory text for an embedded system or microcontroller course. While most texts discuss only one specific microcontroller, this book offers a unique approach by covering the common ground among all microcontrollers in one volume.
Since the text does not focus on a particular processor, it can be used with processor-specific material–such as manufacturer’s data sheets and reference manuals–or with texts, including author Fredrick M. Cady’s Software and Hardware Engineering: Motorola M68HC11 or Software and Hardware Engineering: Motorola M68HC12. Now fully updated, the second edition covers the fundamental operation of standard microcontroller features, including parallel and serial I/O interfaces, interrupts, analog-to-digital conversion, and timers, focusing on the electrical interfaces as needed. It devotes one chapter to showing how a variety of devices can be used, and emphasizes C program software development, design, and debugging.
Microcontrollers and Microcomputers Principles of Software and Hardware Engineering





