Activity 4.2: Inputs to Conceptual Design In this activity, you will participate in a class discussion to identify the various inputs into the conceptual design process. Objectives After completing this activity, you will be able to: ! Identify the ty[r]
change as well. As the solution’s conceptual design is finalized, it is important that everyone on the design team, as well as customers and key stakeholders, agree about what the conceptual design represents. The conceptual d[r]
Each phase represents a different view of the solution$User’s perspective: conceptual design$Project team’s perspective: logical design$Developer’s perspective: physical designPhysicalConceptual Logical The solution-design process is evolutionary; it evolve[r]
which it will be used and to answer the basic questions of who, what, when, where, why, and how. The conceptual design produces a set of scenarios that describe the necessary requirements for the proposed solution. During later stages of development, when de[r]
• Verification with respect to acceptance criteria:The results of the analysis of the enveloping scenarios are finally compared withpredefined acceptance criteria. These acceptance criteria can be expressed in re-lation to parameters of the engineered installation, and to
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN The origins of the design of modern tensile roof structures are based on physical modelling techniques, particularly for the conceptual form-finding process [1]. These physical procedures have ranged, in order of accuracy, from minimum surface soap films, through stretch fabr[r]
solution from the perspective of the project team and defines it as a set of cooperating services. The design team does not, however, define these services in terms of a specific technology. Logical design takes the business problem identified in the[r]
Novozymes), a plasterboard factory (Gyproc), a soil remediation company (AS Bioteknisk Jordrens), and the municipality of Kalundborg through the town’s heating facility. The eco-park was initiated when Gyproc located its facility in Kalundborg in 1970 to take advantage of the[r]
expect to be built. The functional specification also serves as a method of communicating the project’s specifics to the team members, the customer, and all other stakeholders. It serves as a written agreement on the specific features that are to be included in thi[r]
Metaphors enable a business application to imitate the actual business process by implementing the representation of the artifacts used by the business. One of the most obvious metaphors in computer applications is the menu. A menu in a restaurant provides y[r]
salespersonfills-outproductfororderN1customerplacesorderTeorey.book Page 5 Saturday, July 16, 2005 12:57 PM6CHAPTER 1IntroductionII(b)], two possible views of the product/customer databaseare merged into a single global view based on common datafor customer and order. View integration is also[r]
Randolph, A. Ranganathan, J. Reminga, A. Therber, M. Thomas, Q. Wang, R. Wang,Z. Wang, and J. Yuan. Arcady Grenader, James Harrington, and Martin Reames atWisconsin and Nina Tang at Berkeley provided especially detailed feedback.Charlie Fischer, Avi Silberschatz, and Jeff Ullman gave me invaluable ad[r]
... Chapter Reflectivity based optofluidic switch based on cascading prisms Chapter Reflectivity based optofluidic switch based on cascading prisms 3.1 Conceptual design and optical principle for the optofluidic. .. [1][3-8] Optofluidic technology also enables the mass implementation of the optics c[r]
This guidebook is aimed clearly at the needs of the student, with a thorough understanding of, and provision for, the potential conceptual difficulties he or she is likely to encounter. This guidebook is aimed clearly at the needs of the student, with a thorough understanding of, and provision for,[r]