scholarly journals Design and Development of Book Search Applications in the Library of the University of PGRI Semarang Online Based on 3D Mobile Scanner

Author(s):  
Nurahman Iqbal ◽  
Buchori Achmad ◽  
Indriarti Teodora
1999 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. R. Burvill ◽  
A. E. Samuel

The Engineering Design Group (EDG) at the University of Melbourne has forged an ongoing teaching, research, design and development liaison programme with industrial partners, in particular with small and medium-sized enterprises. A government-sponsored centre, the Advanced Engineering Centre for Manufacturing has provided the necessary financial and human resources to facilitate this collaborative work. The EDG collaborative programme incorporates a staged liaison model: short-horizon senior undergraduate industrial projects and medium-horizon product design and development opportunities that can include training for industry clients, leading to long-horizon collaborative projects that attempt to enhance the technologies used in Australian industry.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Johnston ◽  
Timothy McGoldrick ◽  
David Funston ◽  
Harry Kwan ◽  
Mark Alexander ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Sergio Rizzuti

The paper is based on the experience matured in ten years of teaching “Product Design and Development” at the Faculty of Engineering of the University of Calabria (Italy). This paper is focused on the consideration that many of the methods employed during product design activity share a matrix formulation as a means of collecting and managing project data and that students must be familiarized with the use of this kind of data structure in a very different way from their previous experiences, because project management can be pursued by mapping information from one method to another. Students are in fact guided to organize data related to the design on which they are involved in order to guarantee that the information can be mapped from one formulation to another, meaning that they have the whole design process under control. Attention will be paid to the pedagogic aspects and problems associated with the way how information can be collected and ranked and how a decision can be made.


1997 ◽  
pp. 679-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Huber ◽  
A. Perrier ◽  
J. F. Balavoine ◽  
M. Archinard ◽  
D. Lefebvre ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Sam Paterson ◽  
Pujith Vijayaratnam ◽  
Charith Perera ◽  
Graham Doig

The Sunswift project of the University of New South Wales, Australia, exists to provide university students with a multi-disciplinary engineering challenge, enhancing the true educational value of their degree with a unique hands-on real-world experience of creating solar–electric hybrid vehicles. The design and development of the low-drag ‘solar supercar’ Sunswift eVe car are described here, detailing the student-led process from initial concept sketches to the completed performance vehicle. eVe was designed to demonstrate the potential of effective solar integration into a practical passenger-carrying vehicle. It is a two-seater vehicle with an on-body solar array area of 4 m2 and a battery capacity of 16 kW h, which is capable of sustained speeds over 130 km/h and a single-charge range of over 800 km. Carbon fiber was used extensively, and the components were almost all designed, built, and tested by students with industry and academic mentorship. The eVe project was initiated in mid-2012, and the car competed in the 2013 World Solar Challenge, taking class line honours. It subsequently set a Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile land speed record in 2014 for the fastest average speed of an electric vehicle over 500 km; it is now the team’s intent to develop the car to road-legal status.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomoki Morokuma ◽  
Tsutomu Aoki ◽  
Mamoru Doi ◽  
Toshihiro Handa ◽  
Takafumi Kamizuka ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron Williams ◽  
Robert Nell ◽  
Chris Moore ◽  
Alex Bobrek

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Womack ◽  
Miles Crist ◽  
Laura Kruger ◽  
Kelsey DeGeorge ◽  
Karynna Tuan ◽  
...  

The harsh environment on the lunar surface presents unique technological challenges for space exploration. This paper presents research on the design and development of the Telescope-deployment High-vacuum teleOperated Rover (THOR), currently being built and tested in the Lunar and Airless Bodies Simulator (LABS) facility at the University of Colorado Boulder. This rover is fabricated entirely out of cost-effective commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) components and materials. THOR can potentially survive for more than one simulated year in conditions similar to that of the lunar environment, demonstrating the successful initial results of a first phase research study on material and electronic survivability in an extreme environment such as the Moon. KEYWORDS: Telerobotics, Space Exploration, LUNAR, High-vacuum, Electronic Survivability, Robotics, Engineering


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