Manufacturing Business Technology
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Package for MRP prioritization wins APICS' Innovation awardBy Staff, January 1, 2004The Innovation award at this year's APICS conference went to Systems Plus, a small software vendor that sells an add-on to existing MRP systems that helps get orders out on time. OTTO (On-Time Orders) extracts information from legacy systems into a separate data warehouse. There, it runs a procedure that tags every activity directly to the top-level demand—i.
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Invensys's Wonderware gets into hardwareBy Staff, January 1, 2004There's a certain irony in the announcement late last year that Wonderware, a plant intelligence software vendor, will begin selling PC-based hardware. After all, the vendor rose to prominence more than a decade ago on the value proposition that manufacturers could use basic PC hardware—paired with Wonderware's low-cost, Windows-based software—to handle supervisory control tasks.
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In BriefBy Staff, January 1, 2004
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Upside production flexibility (UPF)By Staff, January 1, 2004Tracking upside production flexibility (UPF)—a metric within the Supply Chain Council's Supply Chain Operation Reference model, or SCOR—can tell you how responsive your supply chain is to a quantum change in demand. Specifically, UPF measures the number of days required to increase your manufacturing output by 20 percent and do it on a sustainable basis, says Rick Hoole, a lead dir...
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Geographical, .NET synergies, in Epicor's deal for ScalaBy Paul Mann, contributing editor, January 1, 2004If, as expected, regulators and shareholders sign off on a proposed $87-million deal, enterprise suite vendor Epicor Software Corp. will acquire enterprise suite vendor Scala Business Solutions during the first quarter of 2004. "The anticipated transaction will create an entity with approximately $250 million in annual revenues, and with more than 20,000 customers, which makes us the eleven...
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Web services could make life easier for vendors and usersBy Staff, January 1, 2004The emergence of Web services promises to make it easier for merging software vendors—like Epicor and Scala—to blend their separate product lines. That means users shouldn't have to worry about being pressured to buy a whole new set of applications every time one of their vendors is acquired.
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Time for a technology predictionBy Staff, January 1, 2004Robert Northrup, design and development director with Tallán, a professional services firm in Glastonbury, Conn., says in 2004 companies will better harness network computing power: "As companies look for ways to increase productivity, I think the distributed computing model will catch on in more places," says Northrup.
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Siemens to acquire IndX SoftwareBy Staff, January 1, 2004Siemens will acquire IndX Software Corp.—the provider of XHQ, an application for real-time operations intelligence—for an undisclosed amount. IndX will become part of Siemens Energy & Automation. "For the customer, the factory is a bottleneck," says Dietmar Siersdorfer, senior VP of manufacturing execution solutions, Siemens Industrial Solutions & Services (I&S) organiz...
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Comdex not what it used to beBy Staff, January 1, 2004The fall Comdex event in Las Vegas has long been considered the granddaddy of all high-tech trade shows. But this past November, a long-time Vegas cab driver cracked that, "They held a trade show and nobody came." That's not entirely true. Regulars such as Microsoft chairman Bill Gates and Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy were there—delivering their customary dueling keynote speeches.
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Rockwell's leader sees rebound, with software key to growthBy Staff, January 1, 2004Rockwell Automation celebrated its 100th year at its Automation Fair in Milwaukee in late November, but it also had another reason to celebrate: an upturn in the global manufacturing economy. Speaking at the event's media summit, Donald H. Davis, CEO of the plant automation hardware and software giant, said recent positive economic news coincides with improvement in Rockwell's demand picture.
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Agile, IBM, others take PLM in green directionJim Brown, contributing editor, January 1, 2004Recent regulations—such as those for Waste of Electronic and Electrical Equipment (WEEE), and Restrictions on Hazardous Substances (RoHS) in electronics—increase manufacturers' responsibilities for product-related environmental impact. Companies are scrambling to meet this new level of scrutiny, and product life-cycle management (PLM) software vendors—given that their systems ...
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Up and runningBy Staff, January 1, 2004Enigma reports MTU Aero Engines' Zuhai facility in China is MTU's second maintenance, repair and overhaul facility to come online for real-time access to maintenance and parts information for five engine lines. Enigma integrates content, commerce, and collaboration in its 3C Support Chain Platform to deliver product information to the point of work.
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Vendors and users back group seeking common method for sharing product data modelsBy Staff, January 1, 2004A coalition consisting of both developers and users of product life-cycle management (PLM) technology has formed what amounts to a standards body in hopes of forging a single method for creating, storing, and sharing product data models. UGS PLM Solutions (formerly EDS PLM Solutions) spearheaded formation of this group, which is called JT Open.
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Management movesBy Staff, January 1, 2004Product life-cycle management vendor Aras Corp. has appointed Rick Lucier to CEO. Lucier was instrumental in growing Innoveda, a electronic design automation company, from $50 million to $110 million in annual sales. Senior management roles at Innoveda, Viewlogic Systems, and Synopsys included president, COO, and group VP.
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EU steps up mandated end-of-PLM; impact on U.S. not clearStaff, December 1, 2003Global manufacturers wanting to do business in the European Union (EU) must increasingly address end of product life, based on two directives that became effective February 2003. The Waste Electronic and Electrical Equipment (WEEE) and the Reduction of Hazard Substances (RoHS) directives require EU member states to put in place and enforce collection programs for products ranging from toys and ...
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De-emphasizing ERP, Emerson and Lockheed don't ignore integration needsStaff, December 1, 2003Global manufacturers that believed even a few years ago that a sound enterprise strategy meant commitment to a single ERP suite now say integration technology will allow use of multiple ERP systems for the foreseeable future, without penalty. But these same companies see no less business reasons for enterprise integration, and they believe cost savings and revenue growth will follow from their ...
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Says here distributors and manufacturers don't like each otherStaff, December 1, 2003A recent survey of industrial distributor operations by Industrial Distribution magazine and Philadelphia-based Pembroke Consulting reveals relations between distributors and their manufacturing suppliers are becoming more strained at the same time they're becoming more collaborative. For example, distributors view only 15 percent of manufacturers as "true partners.
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Wal-Mart is a change-agent for U.S. manufacturersStaff, December 1, 2003The success of Wal-Mart is having a profound impact on manufacturing strategies, the pace of globalization, and productivity. Economists are surprised that productivity gains have continued during the economic downturn that began in 2001. More recently this pace has even accelerated, as the following quote from The Wall Street Journal makes clear: The Labor department reported that the product...
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New team at Camstar has cure for medical device maker illsStaff, December 1, 2003Camstar, a manufacturing execution system (MES) vendor that's been around since the mid-1980s, is, like at least several other manufacturing applications vendors, focusing increasing energy on the medical device industry—and more generally on life sciences as a whole. The reason is simple. Because of its highly regulated nature, medical device manufacture clearly benefits from automated ...
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It's not about regulatory compliance, say KPMG and SeeCommerce—but it could beStaff, December 1, 2003In introducing a new solution—one called SeeRisk, which combines a consultative operations assessment with technology to monitor key supply chain performance and risk parameters—John Rittenhouse, national practice leader for operations risk management, KPMG, says his company and its technology partner, SeeCommerce, aren't trying to capitalize on the "regulatory factor.
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