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Manufacturing Execution Systems — MES

Contributor(s): Kletti, Jürgen [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007.Description: XII, 272 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783540497448.Other title: With contributions of numerous experts.Subject(s): Engineering | Organization | Planning | Production management | Information technology | Business -- Data processing | Application software | Engineering economics | Engineering economy | Quality control | Reliability | Industrial safety | Engineering | Engineering Economics, Organization, Logistics, Marketing | Computer Applications | Organization | Operations Management | IT in Business | Quality Control, Reliability, Safety and RiskDDC classification: 658.5 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
New ways for the effective factory -- MES for process capability -- Added value from software -- MES: the new class of IT applications -- Building an MES system -- Integrated production management with MES -- Detailed planning and control with MES -- Quality assurance with MES -- Personnel management with MES -- MES with SAP -- MES in plastics processing.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The production plants of today develop into modern service centers. Economic efficiency of modern added value is not a property of products alone but of the process. Decisive potential in business now is a question of process capability, rather than production capability. Process capability in business requires real-time systems for optimization. Business-IT needs to be developed from telecommunications and ERP to real time services, which are not offered by the prevailing ERP systems. Today, only modern Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES) offer real-time applications. They generate current as well as historic mappings of production facilities and thus they can be used as basis for optimizations. It is important to map the supply chain in real time. Increasing complexity in production requires an integrated view of the production and service facilities: detailed scheduling, status collection, quality, performance analysis, tracing of material and so on have to be recorded and displayed in an integrated way. MESA (Manufacturing Enterprise Solutions Association) standardized applications. Further standardizations on this subject are already being developed, like ISA S95. Expectations regarding MES are high, related to TQM, SIX Sigma, production scheduling or optimized material movements. This book describes the requirements for optimized Manufacturing Execution Systems.
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBK10063
Total holds: 0

New ways for the effective factory -- MES for process capability -- Added value from software -- MES: the new class of IT applications -- Building an MES system -- Integrated production management with MES -- Detailed planning and control with MES -- Quality assurance with MES -- Personnel management with MES -- MES with SAP -- MES in plastics processing.

The production plants of today develop into modern service centers. Economic efficiency of modern added value is not a property of products alone but of the process. Decisive potential in business now is a question of process capability, rather than production capability. Process capability in business requires real-time systems for optimization. Business-IT needs to be developed from telecommunications and ERP to real time services, which are not offered by the prevailing ERP systems. Today, only modern Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES) offer real-time applications. They generate current as well as historic mappings of production facilities and thus they can be used as basis for optimizations. It is important to map the supply chain in real time. Increasing complexity in production requires an integrated view of the production and service facilities: detailed scheduling, status collection, quality, performance analysis, tracing of material and so on have to be recorded and displayed in an integrated way. MESA (Manufacturing Enterprise Solutions Association) standardized applications. Further standardizations on this subject are already being developed, like ISA S95. Expectations regarding MES are high, related to TQM, SIX Sigma, production scheduling or optimized material movements. This book describes the requirements for optimized Manufacturing Execution Systems.

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