Data Collection in Belgium and Their Use in the Maintenance Planning System

2009 ◽  
pp. 334-334-16
Author(s):  
LJE Heleven ◽  
P Dirckx
2017 ◽  
Vol 84 ◽  
pp. 14-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shan Wan ◽  
Dongbo Li ◽  
James Gao ◽  
Rajkumar Roy ◽  
Yifei Tong

Author(s):  
Wayne A. Sarasua ◽  
William J. Davis

The technology-driven, rapidly advancing field of spatial data and information science (SDIS) is an integral part of numerous engineering professions. Many college civil engineering programs are struggling to find ways to accommodate this subject in an already crowded undergraduate curriculum. There are several reasons that taking a course in SDIS is desirable for civil engineers entering today’s demanding job market. First, technologies related to surveying, spatial data, and information science are among the fastest developing in the industry, and there is significant demand for skills in the latest technology. Second, spatial data collection and analysis are essential to all civil engineering disciplines; thus, a fundamental understanding of data collection and analysis techniques is desirable. The transportation discipline of civil engineering may face the greatest need for professionals specializing in SDIS. Transportation planning, system design, facilities management, and transportation logistics rely heavily on SDIS technologies, including conventional surveying, geographic information systems, Global Positioning System, remote sensing, and digital terrain modeling. A description is given of a widely transferable and technically up-to-date course in geomatics that expands on traditional surveying by incorporating modern methods of spatial data collection, management, and analysis. Including a course on geomatics early in students’ undergraduate civil engineering curriculum may plant the seed for the development of future SDIS and SDIS for transportation professionals. Lessons learned in developing geomatics courses at Clemson University, Georgia Tech, and The Citadel are presented. Findings and recommendations are summarized with respect to broader application issues affecting the civil engineering curriculum.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Domenic P. Carlucci ◽  
Robert Conachey ◽  
John B. Hagan

The monitoring of machinery condition, performance, and maintenance activities continues to be vital to the effective management of marine assets. Identifying key data, developing a data collection protocol, and analyzing the data are key to effective management. Planning for these activities should rely on risk and reliability techniques. Integrating data collection with the vessel’s or asset’s control and monitoring systems can reduce crew burden and simplify an often complex puzzle of qualifying and analyzing condition and performance data into a standardized process for maintenance planning and decision making related to asset operations. The information gathered from these processes can create a knowledge loop that, when implemented in an enterprise asset management (EAM) strategy, can improve current operational execution and influence the next generation of marine asset designs. Classification societies can apply this information for effective surveys and Rules improvement.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-34
Author(s):  
Dewi Agustya Ningrum ◽  
Intan Fauziyah ◽  
Wulan Purnamasari ◽  
Eko Purwanto

Drug supply information system in the health center is needed by all government agencies in the health sector, the existing system must be clear from how the drug supply planning system until the drug is ready for distribution and of course the drug supply system has the aim of perfecting inventory, one of which is to avoid lack of drug stock, avoiding overlapping authority and application of systems for inventory management. This study uses descriptive qualitative methods and uses primary and secondary data collection. This study also uses data collection techniques by interview and observation. This research has a weakness in the LPPO letter whose request sometimes does not match the reception, the recording system uses manuals because sometimes manual recording has many obstacles in its writing.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document