A Methodology for Systems Engineering, Volume 24 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 64
Page 107
... usually difficult to measure and control , since most technical obsolescence occurs because of unforeseen advances in the art . Simplicity or elegance as a system objective has a strong subjective flavor in the sense that what seems ...
... usually difficult to measure and control , since most technical obsolescence occurs because of unforeseen advances in the art . Simplicity or elegance as a system objective has a strong subjective flavor in the sense that what seems ...
Page 221
... Usually the first step in such a market determination is to obtain a few working or nonworking models of the product which can form the basis . for a market survey . Potential customers are permitted to look at the model , handle it ...
... Usually the first step in such a market determination is to obtain a few working or nonworking models of the product which can form the basis . for a market survey . Potential customers are permitted to look at the model , handle it ...
Page 235
... usually will include statements about : Profit Market Cost Quality Performance Competition Compatibility Adaptability Longevity Simplicity Safety Legal and / or ethical constraints Intangibles Statements about these subjects become more ...
... usually will include statements about : Profit Market Cost Quality Performance Competition Compatibility Adaptability Longevity Simplicity Safety Legal and / or ethical constraints Intangibles Statements about these subjects become more ...
Contents
SOME FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS OF SYSTEMS | 3 |
THE TD2 RADIO RELAY SYSTEM | 22 |
3 | 61 |
Copyright | |
20 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
alternative amplitude analog computer analysis basic Bell Telephone Laboratories block diagram called channel Chapter choose circuit complete components cost creative creative technology criterion curve decision defined demand functions discussed economic encoding entropy environment equation evaluation example existing factors feedback frequency given important income individual information theory inputs and outputs interval scale kinds level of measurement logical Mason's rule matrix maximum means measure ment methods minimax mixed strategy noise objectives operations research optimal organization payoff payoff matrix phase physical planning possible preference probability problem profit projects properties radio ratio ratio scale requirements scale signal signal-flow graph solving specific statistical strategy studies subsystems systems engineering systems engineering process systems synthesis technical techniques telephone television theory tion transfer function transmission transmittance utility variables