作者:
HERR, DONALDBLUMENstOCK, NORMANHONORARY MEMBERTHE AUTHORS MR. HERR
Honorary Member of the A.S.N.E. has the B.S. in E.E. M.S. in E.E. and E.E. degrees. He was National Coffin Foundation Fellow of the General Electric Company National Tau Beta Pi Fellow and National Sigma Tau Fellow at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering University of Pennsylvania and at M.I.T. prior to World War II. He was also awarded a National Gordon McKay Fellowship by Harvard University and received the A. Atwater Kent Award in Electrical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. A licensed radio amateur at 12 Mr. Herr first worked summers at RCA and Bell Laboratories and was with the General Electric Company in 1939 and 1940 as development engineer before volunteering for over five years of active Naval duty. He served as Officer-in-Charge Electrical Minesweeping Group Bureau of Ships December 1940 to April 1943 as Acting Design Superintendent and Officer-in-Charge
Los Angeles-Long Beach Harbor Surge Investigation U. S. Naval Shipyard Terminal Island to November 1944 and as Research-Patents Liaison Officer
Office of Naval Research to January 1946 returning to inactive duty as lieutenant commander U.S.N.R. Mr. Herr received two Navy letters of commendation. Since 1946 he was assistant to vice president in charge of the engineering division of Control Instrument Company Brooklyn New York and is project engineer at the Reeves Instrument Corporation responsible for new servo and computer component developments. Mr. Herr has been associated with Dean Harold Pender and Professor Ernst Guillemin in advanced network theory and has specialized for 12 years in development and design of servomechanisms differential analyzers computers and fire control systems utilizing advanced network analysis and synthesis methods. Mr. Herr is also presently teaching servomechanisms network-synthesis and feedback amplifier design in the Graduate School of the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. He has contributed frequently to the JOURNAL OF THE AMERICA
作者:
HERR, DONALD HONORARYMEMBERTHE AUTHOR:Mr.Herr
Honorary Member of the A.S.N.E. has the B.S. in E.E. M.S. in E.E. and E.E. degrees. He was National Coffin Foundation Fellow of the General Electric Company National Tau Beta Pi Fellow and National Sigma Tau Fellow at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering University of Pennsylvania and at M.I.T. prior to World War II. He was also awarded a National Gordon McKay Fellowship by Harvard University and received the A. Atwater Kent Award in Electrical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. A licensed radio amateur at 12 Mr. Herr first worked summers at RCA and Bell Laboratories and was with the General Electric Company in 1939 and 1940 as development engineer before volunteering for over five years of active Naval duty. He served as Officer-in-Charge Electrical Minesweeping Group Bureau of Ships December 1940 to April 1943 as Acting Design Superintendent and Officer-in-Charge
Los Angeles-Long Beach Harbor Surge Investigation U. S. Naval Shipyard Terminal Island to November 1944 and as Research-Patents Liaison Officer
Office of Naval Research to January 1946 returning to inactive duty as lieutenant commander U.S.N.R. Mr. Herr received two Navy letters of commendation. Since 1946 he was assistant to vice president in charge of the engineering division of Control Instrument Company Brooklyn New York and is project engineer at the Reeves Instrument Corporation responsible for new servo and computer component developments. Mr. Herr has been associated with Dean Harold Pender and Professor Ernst Guillemin in advanced network theory and has specialized for 12 years in development and design of servomechanisms differential analyzers computers and fire control systems utilizing advanced network analysis and synthesis methods. He has contributed frequently to the JournalOF THE AmericanSocietyOF NavalEngineersand was the Society's 1945 Prize Essayist on the subject: “Engineering in the Navy as seen by an Active Reserve Officer.” He is senior member of the I.R.E
作者:
RAWAt, Pwho began his education in his native India
received a Bachelor of Technology degree with honors from the Indian Institute of Technology in 1957. His subsequent education includes S. M.‘s in Industrial Management and Naval Architecture & Marine Engineering from M. I. T. in 1961 and a professional degree in Naval Architecture from the same institution in 1965. Rawat's career began as a Naval Architect in preliminary design with the Hamburg firm of Howladtswerke in 1958. A year later he performed as a research assistant in M. I. T.'s School of Industrial Management for a Ford Foundation Project for a top management training program for India. After this two-year period he acted as the head of the Department Head of Engineering at the Ghana Nautical College in West Africa until 1963. He returned to M. I. T. afterwards to work as a research assistant in Naval Architecture on structural optimization programs. From 1965 to 1966 he filled the capacity of Naval Architecture with M. Rosenblatt & Son in the area of structural design on such projects as MOHOLE AGOR 14 and Catamaran Hull. Since 1966 Rawat has been working in various capacities with Litton Industries: Senior Naval Architect on the FDL Project Section Manager of Hull Structures for the LHA and DD Projects
and his present position as Section Manager for Computer Aided Ship Design.
Many useful conclusions can be drawn if hull structural design is considered as a system. Proper definition of system objectives enablessetting up of meaningful long range and intermediate goals. Currentstate-of-art...
Many useful conclusions can be drawn if hull structural design is considered as a system. Proper definition of system objectives enablessetting up of meaningful long range and intermediate goals. Currentstate-of-artin systemsengineeringissuch thatthe system objectives can be denned in mathematical form. this provides meaningful scales for progress measurement. the engineering function isto meetthe goalsset by systemsengineering. the state-of-artin engineering has a considerable impact on the definition of system objectives. in recenttimes we have made considerable progressin developing analytical techniques. Many interesting conclusions result from our experience in using the analytical toolsin an iterative manner for design. By using relatively simple algorithms for iteration the analytical processes can be sequenced in such a manner that optimum solution is guaranteed even under a large and complex set of design constraints. Use of computers makesit possible to generate the scantlings using iterative approach with such speed that many importantstructural configuration decisions can be made by means of thorough parametric analyses. the system objectivestherefore are very differentin scope today and they should be further modified astechnology advances. there are several problemsthat can be recognized and solved in the systems context. smooth man-machine operation is an example of this.
this book constitutesthe refereed proceedings of the 8th FiRA international Conference on secure and trust Computing, Data Management, and Applications, stA 2011, held in Loutraki, Greece, in June 2011. stA2011 isth...
详细信息
ISBN:
(数字)9783642223396
ISBN:
(纸本)9783642223389
this book constitutesthe refereed proceedings of the 8th FiRA international Conference on secure and trust Computing, Data Management, and Applications, stA 2011, held in Loutraki, Greece, in June 2011. stA
2011 isthe first conference after the merger of the successful ssDU, Ubisec, and tRUstsymposium series previously held from 2006 until 2010 in various locations.
the 29 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from numeroussubmissions. the papers address varioustheories and practical applications of secure and trust computing and data managementin future environments.
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