SIG-Library

Query returned 1755 results.

Product Lifecycle Management for Cross-X Engineering Design

Bergsjö, Dag; Vielhaber, Michael; Malvius, Diana; Burr, Holger; Malmqvist, Johan // 2007

Project Structure: An Important Factor in Design Planning?

Flanagan, Tomas; Eckert, Claudia M.; Clarkson, P. John // 2007

Proposal for a Holistic Approach to Improve Software Validation Process in Automotive Industry

Awédikian, Roy; Yannou, Bernard; Mekhilef, Mounib; Bouclier, Line; Lebreton, Philippe; Augusto, Ludovic // 2007

Proposal of a Change Management Method to Improve the On-Demand NPD Process in Technological SMES

Costa, Janaina; Rozenfeld, Henrique; Jubileu, Andrea P. // 2007

Real Time Resource Scheduling Within a Distributed Collaborative Design Environment

Whitfield, R.I; Duffy, Alex H.B.; Coates, Graham // 2007

Relationships Between the Concepts in the Design Ontology

Storga, Mario; Marjanovic, Dorian ; Andreasen, Mogens Myrup // 2007

Requirements for a Mobile Knowledge Management System in Engineering Design

Spiteri, Christopher L.; Borg, Jonathan C.; Cachia, Ernest; Vella, Mark // 2007

Scenario Based Scheduling for New Aircraft Development

Lizarralde, Iban; Esquirol, Patrick; Rivičre, Arnaud // 2007

Technology Windows: a New Method to Determine Valuable Product-Market Combinations

van Onselen, Lenny; Lauche, Kristina; Silvester, Sacha; Veefkind,Menno // 2007

The Use of Faceted Classification in the Organisation of Engineering Design Documents

Giess, Matt D.; Wild, Peter J.; McMahon, Christopher A. // 2007

Towards An Integrated Management of Engineering Design System and Enterprise

Sperandio, Severine ; Robin, Vincent; Girard, Philippe // 2007

Towards Integration of KBE and PLM

?ati?, Amer; Malmqvist, Johan // 2007

Towards Interoperability Between Functional Taxonomies Using An Ontology-Based Mapping

Ookubo, Masanori; Koji, Yusuke; Sasajima, Munehiko; Kitamura, Yoshinobu; Mizoguchi, Riichiro // 2007

Towards the Design of Self-Optimizing Mechatronic Systems: Consistency Between Domain-Spanning and Domain-Specific Models

Gausemeier, Jürgen; Giese, Holger; Sch?fer, Wilhelm; Axenath, Bj?rn; Frank, Ursula; Henkler, Stefan; Pook, Sebastian; Tichy, Matthias // 2007

Towards the Semantic Interoperability Between Kbe and PLM Systems

Bermell-García, Pablo; Fan, Ip-Shing; Murton, Adrian // 2007

Transfer of Crew Ressource Management Training Into Product Design

Geis, Christian; Schuster, Ilona; Bierhals, Reimer; Badke-Schaub, Petra; Birkhofer, Herbert // 2007

Uncertainty Management in Innovative Product Design

Daniel, Pierre; Dangoumau, Nathalie; Bigand, Michel // 2007

Variant Creation Using Configuration of a Reference Variant

Feldhusen, Jörg; Nurcahya, Erwin; Löwer, Manuel // 2007

Wikis as a Cooperation and Communication Platform Within Product Development

Albers, Albert; Deigendesch, Tobias; Drammer, Moritz; Ellmer, Claudia; Meboldt, Mirko; Sauter, Christian // 2007

Boolean Searches

The following examples demonstrate some search strings that use boolean operators:

  • design community
    Find rows that contain at least one of the two words.
  • +design +community
    Find rows that contain both words.
  • +design community
    Find rows that contain the word “design”, but rank rows higher if they also contain “community”.
  • +design -community
    Find rows that contain the word “design” but not “community”.
  • +design ~community
    Find rows that contain the word “design”, but if the row also contains the word “community”, rate it lower than if row does not.
  • +design +(>community <decisions)
    Find rows that contain the words “design” and “community”, or “design” and “decisions” (in any order), but rank “design community” higher than “design decisions”
  • design*
    Find rows that contain words such as “design”, “designs”, “designing”, or “designer”.
  • "some words"
    Find rows that contain the exact phrase “some words” (for example, rows that contain “some words of wisdom” but not “some noise words”). Note that the " characters that enclose the phrase are operator characters that delimit the phrase. They are not the quotation marks that enclose the search string itself.

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