1,083 research outputs found
Mitigating Space Industry Supply Chain Risk Thru Risk-Based Analysis
Using risk-based analysis to consider supply chain disruptions and uncertainty along with potential mitigation strategies in the early stages of space industry projects can be used avoid schedule delays, cost overruns, and lead to successful project outcomes.
Space industry projects, especially launch vehicles, are complicated assemblies of high-technology and specialized components. Components are engineered, procured, manufactured, and assembled for specific missions or projects, unlike make-to-stock manufacturing where assemblies are produced at a mass production rate for customers to choose off the shelf or lot, like automobiles.
The supply chain for a space industry project is a large, complicated web where one disruption, especially for sole-sourced components, could ripple through the project causing delays at multiple project milestones. This ripple effect can even cause the delay or cancelation of the entire project unless project managers develop and employ risk mitigations strategies against supply chain disruption and uncertainty. The unpredictability of when delays and disruptions may occur makes managing these projects extremely difficult.
By using risk-based analysis, project managers can better plan for and mitigate supply chain risk and uncertainty for space industry projects to better manage project success.
Space industry project supply chain risk and uncertainty can be evaluated through risk assessments at major project milestones and during the procurement process. Mitigations for identified risks can be evaluated and implemented to better manage project success. One mitigation strategy to supply chain risk and uncertainty is implementing a dual or multi-supplier sourcing procurement strategy.
This research explores using a risk-based analysis to identify where this mitigation strategy can be beneficial for space industry projects and how its implementation affects project success. First a supply chain risk assessment and mitigation decision tool will be used at major project milestones to show where a multi-sourcing strategy may be beneficial. Next, updated supplier quote evaluation tools will confirm the usage of multiple suppliers for procurement. Modeling and simulation are then used to show the impact of that strategy on the project success metrics of cost and schedule
Production planning and control of closed-loop supply chains
More and more supply chains emerge that include a return flow of materials. Many original equipment manufacturers are nowadays engaged in the remanufacturing business. In many process industries, production defectives and by-products are reworked. These closed-loop supply chains deserve special attention. Production planning and control in such hybrid systems is a real challenge, especially due to increased uncertainties. Even companies that are engaged in remanufacturing operations only, face more complicated planning situations than traditional manufacturing companies.We point out the main complicating characteristics in closed-loop systems with both remanufacturing and rework, and indicated the need for new or modified/extended production planning and control approaches. An overview of the existing scientific contributions is given. It appears that we only stand at the beginning of this line of research, and that many more contributions are needed and expected in the future.closed-loop supply chains;Production planning and control
Failure Risk and Quality Cost Management in Single versus Multiple Sourcing Decision
The advantage of multiple sourcing to protect against supplier failures arising from undependable products due to latent defects is examined using a model with non-linear external failure costs. Prior research has focused only on supplier failures arising from unreliable supply, such as late/insufficient/no delivery. I derive a closed-form characterization of the optimal production quota allocation for the LUX (Latent defect-Undependable product-eXternal failure) setting. The allocation determines the optimal supply base, with intuitive properties that hold under a mild requirement. The requirement includes the special case of equal procurement costs charged by suppliers but also allows unequal costs without any particular order. The key result of the paper is a necessary and sufficient condition determining whether single or multiple sourcing is optimal. Another condition is obtained to determine the exact size of the optimal supply base, provided the mild requirement holds. With minor modifications, the results also hold when a buyer-initiated procurement contract can be used to elicit private information on the suppliers’ unit variable production costs
Cost analysis for competitive major weapon systems procurement : further refinement and extension
This report tracks historical trends in regional migration and economic conditions and the link with Army recruiting patterns. Future projections of regional population, migration, and economic activity are also presented. A third area of analysis is the impact of foreign immigration on regional markets is analyzed. Finally, the likely impact of projected changes in regional recruiting markets on Army recruiting prospects are assessedsponsored by the Office
of Naval Research under work order N0001 484WR35075http://archive.org/details/costanalysisforc00greesponsored by the Office
of Naval Research under work order N0001 484WR35075N
Order Acceptance and Scheduling: A Taxonomy and Review
Over the past 20 years, the topic of order acceptance has attracted considerable attention from those who study scheduling and those who practice it. In a firm that strives to align its functions so that profit is maximized, the coordination of capacity with demand may require that business sometimes be turned away. In particular, there is a trade-off between the revenue brought in by a particular order, and all of its associated costs of processing. The present study focuses on the body of research that approaches this trade-off by considering two decisions: which orders to accept for processing, and how to schedule them. This paper presents a taxonomy and a review of this literature, catalogs its contributions and suggests opportunities for future research in this area
The impact of microservices: an empirical analysis of the emerging software architecture
Dissertação de mestrado em Informatics EngineeringThe applications’ development paradigm has faced changes in recent years, with modern development being
characterized by the need to continuously deliver new software iterations. With great affinity with those principles,
microservices is a software architecture which features characteristics that potentially promote multiple quality
attributes often required by modern, large-scale applications. Its recent growth in popularity and acceptance in
the industry made this architectural style often described as a form of modernizing applications that allegedly
solves all the traditional monolithic applications’ inconveniences. However, there are multiple worth mentioning
costs associated with its adoption, which seem to be very vaguely described in existing empirical research, being
often summarized as "the complexity of a distributed system". The adoption of microservices provides the
agility to achieve its promised benefits, but to actually reach them, several key implementation principles have
to be honored. Given that it is still a fairly recent approach to developing applications, the lack of established
principles and knowledge from development teams results in the misjudgment of both costs and values of this
architectural style. The outcome is often implementations that conflict with its promised benefits. In order to
implement a microservices-based architecture that achieves its alleged benefits, there are multiple patterns and
methodologies involved that add a considerable amount of complexity. To evaluate its impact in a concrete and
empirical way, one same e-commerce platform was developed from scratch following a monolithic architectural
style and two architectural patterns based on microservices, featuring distinct inter-service communication and
data management mechanisms. The effort involved in dealing with eventual consistency, maintaining a communication
infrastructure, and managing data in a distributed way portrayed significant overheads not existent in the
development of traditional applications. Nonetheless, migrating from a monolithic architecture to a microservicesbased
is currently accepted as the modern way of developing software and this ideology is not often contested,
nor the involved technical challenges are appropriately emphasized. Sometimes considered over-engineering,
other times necessary, this dissertation contributes with empirical data from insights that showcase the impact
of the migration to microservices in several topics. From the trade-offs associated with the use of specific patterns,
the development of the functionalities in a distributed way, and the processes to assure a variety of quality
attributes, to performance benchmarks experiments and the use of observability techniques, the entire development
process is described and constitutes the object of study of this dissertation.O paradigma de desenvolvimento de aplicações tem visto alterações nos últimos anos, sendo o desenvolvimento
moderno caracterizado pela necessidade de entrega contÃnua de novas iterações de software. Com
grande afinidade com esses princÃpios, microsserviços são uma arquitetura de software que conta com caracterÃsticas
que potencialmente promovem múltiplos atributos de qualidade frequentemente requisitados por aplicações
modernas de grandes dimensões. O seu recente crescimento em popularidade e aceitação na industria
fez com que este estilo arquitetural se comumente descrito como uma forma de modernizar aplicações que
alegadamente resolve todos os inconvenientes apresentados por aplicações monolÃticas tradicionais. Contudo,
existem vários custos associados à sua adoção, aparentemente descritos de forma muito vaga, frequentemente
sumarizados como a "complexidade de um sistema distribuÃdo". A adoção de microsserviços fornece a agilidade
para atingir os seus benefÃcios prometidos, mas para os alcançar, vários princÃpios de implementação
devem ser honrados. Dado que ainda se trata de uma forma recente de desenvolver aplicações, a falta de
princÃpios estabelecidos e conhecimento por parte das equipas de desenvolvimento resulta em julgamentos
errados dos custos e valores deste estilo arquitetural. O resultado geralmente são implementações que entram
em conflito com os seus benefÃcios prometidos. De modo a implementar uma arquitetura baseada em
microsserviços com os benefÃcios prometidos existem múltiplos padrões que adicionam considerável complexidade.
De modo a avaliar o impacto dos microsserviços de forma concreta e empÃrica, foi desenvolvida uma
mesma plataforma e-commerce de raiz segundo uma arquitetura monolÃtica e duas arquitetura baseadas em
microsserviços, contando com diferentes mecanismos de comunicação entre os serviços. O esforço envolvido
em lidar com consistência eventual, manter a infraestrutura de comunicação e gerir os dados de uma forma distribuÃda
representaram desafios não existentes no desenvolvimento de aplicações tradicionais. Apesar disso, a
ideologia de migração de uma arquitetura monolÃtica para uma baseada em microsserviços é atualmente aceite
como a forma moderna de desenvolver aplicações, não sendo frequentemente contestada nem os seus desafios
técnicos são apropriadamente enfatizados. Por vezes considerado overengineering, outras vezes necessário,
a presente dissertação visa contribuir com dados práticos relativamente ao impacto da migração para arquiteturas
baseadas em microsserviços em diversos tópicos. Desde os trade-offs envolvidos no uso de padrões
especÃficos, o desenvolvimento das funcionalidades de uma forma distribuÃda e nos processos para assegurar
uma variedade de atributos de qualidade, até análise de benchmarks de performance e uso de técnicas de
observabilidade, todo o desenvolvimento é descrito e constitui o objeto de estudo da dissertação
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