Information Technology for Balanced Manufacturing Systems
DOI: 10.1007/978-0-387-36594-7_34
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Cited by 47 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Fundamentally, this new generation of manufacturing technologies carries a highly disruptive potential if compared with the state of the art: in order to be effectively applied it needs, in fact, not only a thorough development of the technical enabling factors, but also a compelling progress of reassessment of all the supporting mechanisms that a company must put in place to fully exploit the innovation and potential added value. As [5] recognized, this significant step forward is comparable to one of the "paradigm shifts" described by [19]. The previous technology (FAA, RMS) supported the traditional paradigm applied in the automation of assembly systems: integral architectures designed around a product or a product family (ETO).…”
Section: Equipment Suppliersmentioning
confidence: 95%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Fundamentally, this new generation of manufacturing technologies carries a highly disruptive potential if compared with the state of the art: in order to be effectively applied it needs, in fact, not only a thorough development of the technical enabling factors, but also a compelling progress of reassessment of all the supporting mechanisms that a company must put in place to fully exploit the innovation and potential added value. As [5] recognized, this significant step forward is comparable to one of the "paradigm shifts" described by [19]. The previous technology (FAA, RMS) supported the traditional paradigm applied in the automation of assembly systems: integral architectures designed around a product or a product family (ETO).…”
Section: Equipment Suppliersmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Production engineering research has for decades proposed a wide variety of technological solutions for industry, ranging from the early Flexible Automatic Assembly (FAA) systems [1] to Reconfigurable Manufacturing (RMS) [2,3], and then from Bionic [4] to Evolvable Production Systems (EPS) [5,6]. As technology advanced, leading to new materials, pervasive computing and now even cloud technology, it has left industry rather unperturbed: the industrial reality is that if we do not guarantee a financial improvement of some sort, the technology will not be applied.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, the term evolved to the instability derived from internal/external changes or perturbations that cause the system process to be treated as an exception [2,9]. However, the changes occurring on internal and external levels can be either great enhancement opportunities or extremely disruptive events for the system's behaviour [11].…”
Section: Nervousness Behaviour: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These eventually led to several innovative production paradigms and technical contributions namely: Flexible and Reconfigurable Manufacturing Systems (FMS and RMS) [4], [5], [6], Holonic Manufacturing Systems (HMS) [7], [8], Bionic Manufacturing Systems (BMS) [9], Evolvable Assembly Systems (EAS) [10] and, more generally, Multiagent Systems (MAS) [11] and Service Oriented Architectures (SOA) [12], [13], [14]. Most of these contributions have, however, never made it out of the academia or were applied with important deviations in real operation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%