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Chemistry of mesophase formationTakekawa, T. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Methodology for analysis and improvement of planning within the engineer to order sectorPeck, Matthew January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Productivity measurement and capital investment appraisal in electronics designSmith, Stephen John Edgar January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Alkylation of planar chiral cationic pi-allylmolybdenum complexes : the total synthesis of cryptophycin 4Christopher, John Andrew January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors affecting commercialization of newly developed products : a study of selected small and medium enterprises in South AfricaManaczynski, Michael 20 August 2012 (has links)
The research was conducted to determine what the success factors for new product
development and commercialization were for a selected sample of SMEs in South
Africa. Academic literature on success factors for New Product Development and
commercialization, as well as small and medium businesseswere reviewed. The
review of the literature provided the theoretical framework for 21 success factors
relevant to the study. These success factors were further extrapolated to 36 success
factors and used as a basis for determining South African SME relevance. The
findings were consistent with the literature review and point to several success
factors that South African SMEs deem critical to success of new product
development. In conclusion, South African SMEs confirm the importance of the
success factors as presented in the literature. The ranking by importance of these
success factors highlight the specific value that South African SMEs place on these
success factors. These need further in-depth research.
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Integrating a Strategic Sustainable Development Perspective in Product-Service System InnovationThompson, Anthony January 2012 (has links)
There is an intersection of challenges where society’s social and ecological problems coincide with the industrial firm’s challenge to maintain profitability in a globalizing world. Products connect these challenges. The development of these products together with services (product-service systems) therefore provides a critical intervention point to address these challenges. This includes e.g. defining what the products and services are, how they will deliver value to users, and the business models that enable them to be realized, as well as how these can contribute to sustainable development of society. The overarching goal of this research is to contribute to sustainable development of society by better understanding how a strategic sustainable development perspective based on backcasting from basic principles for a sustainable society can be brought into and guide product-service system innovation. Interviews with industry professionals, workshops with both manufacturing companies and within student projects, and industrial cases studies, together with a review of literature and theoretical considerations, provide the methodological basis for this work. This thesis contributes to clarifying theoretical and practical possibilities and limitations for a strategic sustainable development perspective to guide product-service system innovation and provides a basis for the integration of these concepts. The findings indicate that the co-innovation of products and services in product-service systems can contribute to sustainable development of society both by supporting reduced material and energy use and by supporting improved life cycle management of materials. Further, a strategic sustainable development perspective can contribute to the refinement of existing tools and methods in product-service system innovation by providing an operational definition of sustainability articulated in the form of first-order principles that describe the boundary conditions for a sustainable society, and by providing guidelines for how to approach a vision of success inside those boundaries in a strategic way. In order to identify solutions that meet society’s pressing challenges, new solution spaces may need to be identified, and this can be enabled by a shift from product development with service as “add-ons” to their co-innovation in product-service systems. An initial approach for how this could be enabled through bringing together set-based approaches to design product-service systems with a strategic sustainable development perspective is presented.
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Analysis of reliability estimations and spares protection levels on life cycle costs of the Marine Corps H-1 upgrades programThompson, David C. 06 1900 (has links)
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited / The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the relationship between predicted system reliability and planned spare parts levels. This will be accomplished through the integration of factors impacting spare parts levels and Life Cycle Costs into a spreadsheet model that will establish the appropriate relationship between the factors. This thesis will then attempt to determine the impact that varying estimations of reliability will have on both Life Cycle Costs nd spares levels for the H-1 Upgrades Program. / Major, United States Marine Corps
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Determinants of technological innovation : an exploratory study of the Asia-Pacific rim electronics manufacturing industryLim, Cheng Hwa January 1997 (has links)
The rapid progress of the Asia-Pacific rim countries during the past three decades has attracted world-wide attention, especially in the field of technological innovation. By the mid 1980's, researchers had acknowledged that the Asia-Pacific rim region had redefined the global balance of competition while at the same time, the western nations were suffering a decline in world market share. The perspective of the Asia-Pacific rim thinking tends to gravitate towards an endogenous model, where factors are more amenable to the influence of the organisation. An investigation by the World Bank on East Asia (including Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong) has uncovered emphatic evidence that the three dimensions propounded by Ohmae's model of people,finance and assets have been instrumental in enabling these economies "to acquire and master technology".This research explores the philosophy and strategic thinking of the Asia-Pacific rim electronics manufacturing industry with respect to the determinants of technological innovation. The study is divided into three major phases. The initial phase examines the respective strands of literature pertaining to the strategic issues of technological innovation. Special attention has been focused on the functional utilisation of people,finance and assets within the perspective of the Asia-Pacific rim electronics industry, leading to a broad-based framework for the study. Phase two is comprised of two main activities: the first involves exploratory interviews with four notable electronics companies and the second has entailed the gathering of data from 111 companies within the five Asia-Pacific rim countries (Japan, Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong) operating in Singapore and the United Kingdom, by means of a mailed questionnaire survey. Phase three involves qualitative as well as quantitative analyses where statistical methods such as one-way ANOVA, Chi-square test and t-tests have been undertaken to verify the data gathered from the primary research. The findings have uncovered that there are several determinants that are associated with the high rate of successful technological innovation in the sampled companies. For the people's dimension, there has been a high emphasis on training, resulting in a "nurtured" model of a worker, where numerous process innovations have been initiated by trained shop-floor technicians and engineers. At group working levels, various discussion groups (such as quality control circles and productivity discussion groups) have given rise to a collective learning process where shared knowledge enabled new products and processes to be innovated more rapidly than in the conventional departmentalised models. Other aspects of group dynamics has been the continuity (or smooth transition of innovative ideas) and good communications between functional groups thus acceleratingtechnological innovation. For the assets' dimension, the strategic foci have been shifted toautomation, flexible manufacturing process and increasing usage of information technology (including both computer hardware and software) so that new products can be brought to the market faster through the intelligent deployment of such assets and know-how. Finally, funds were found to have been allocated to expedite innovation through investment in R & D and staff training.
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The production of preforms for mass-produced componentsHarper, Catherine Margaret January 1994 (has links)
This doctoral research project was directed towards the economical and cost-effective production of three-dimensional multi-layer textile preforms which provided the reinforcement for composite components with automotive and engineering applications.
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Analýza sortimentu firmy Pfanner, s.r.o. / Product analysis of the company Pfanner, spol. s r.o.Sotáková, Jana January 2010 (has links)
The diploma thesis focuses on the product analysis of the company Pfanner, spol. s r.o. The practical part of the thesis handles with individual components of the product and compares firm and brand-name Pfanner with his nearest competitor and his products, the company Rauch Rankweil. Afterwards, thesis analyses the situation on the market of juices, nectars and sparkling beverages. The final assessment is focused on the competitors' performance on the market and their evaluation of sales value in the specific types of outlets.
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