Re-engineering for sustainable industrial production : proceedings of the OE/IFIP/IEEE International Conference on Integrated and Sustainable Industrial Production Lisbon, Portugal, May 1997
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Bibliographic Information
Re-engineering for sustainable industrial production : proceedings of the OE/IFIP/IEEE International Conference on Integrated and Sustainable Industrial Production Lisbon, Portugal, May 1997
Chapman & Hall, 1997
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In today's changing world, enterprises need to survive in an ever volatile competitive market environment. Their success will depend on the strategies they practice and adopt. Every year, new ideas and concepts are emerging in order for companies to become successful enterprises. Cross Border Enterprises is the new 'hot' topic arising in the business process world at present. Many terms have been coined together and are being driven in the popular business press to describe this new strategy of conducting business, ie. Extended Enterprise (Browne et al. , 1995; O'Neill and Sacket, 1994; Busby and Fan, 1993; Caskey, 1995), Virtual Enterprise (Goldmann and Preiss, 1991; Parunak, 1994; Goranson, 1995; Doumeingts et al. , 1995), Seamless Enterprise (Harrington, 1995), Inter-Enterprise Networking (Browne et al. , 1993), Dynamic Enterprise (Weston, 1996) and so on. Many people have argued that they mean the same thing, just using different words. Others feel they are different. But how different are they? In this paper the authors will present some basic lines required from this new strategy for conducting and coordinating distributed business processes (DBP), as well as trying to clarify the particularities of two of the widest spread terms related to it: Virtual and Extended Enterprise. 2 CLUSTERS OF PRESSURES The business world currently faces an increased trend towards globalisation, environmentally benign production and customisation of products and processes, forcing individual enterprises to work together across the value chain in order to cope with market influences.
Table of Contents
International programme committee. Towards sustainable industrial production. Part one: Invited talks. Part two: Virtual enterprises I. Part three: Virtual enterprises II. Part four: Learning and genetic algorithms. Part five: Mechatronics. Part six: FMS control and tooling. Part seven: Systems design and control. Part eight: Simulation. Part nine: Multi-agent systems. Part ten: Modeling and integration. Part eleven: Systems integration I. Part twelve: Systems Integration II. Part thirteen: Vision and sensors. Part fourteen: Virtual reality and education. Part fifteen: Manufacturing mangement strategies. Part sixteen: CAD/CAM. Part seventeen: Performance indicators. Part eighteen: Optimization and analysis. Index of contributors. Keyword Index.
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