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  1. Engineering index

    New York [etc.]

    Since its creation in 1884, Engineering Index has covered virtually every major engineering innovation from around the world. It serves as the historical record of virtually every major engineering innovation of the 20th century. Recent content is a vital resource for current awareness, new production information, technological forecasting and competitive intelligence. The world?s most comprehensive interdisciplinary engineering database, Engineering Index contains over 10.7 million records. Each year, over 500,000 new abstracts are added from over 5,000 scholarly journals, trade magazines, and conference proceedings. Coverage spans over 175 engineering disciplines from over 80 countries. Updated weekly.

    Online www.engineeringvillage.com

  2. Engineering index [electronic resource] : a metric for assessing margin in engineered systems

    Washington, D.C. : United States. Dept. of Energy ; Oak Ridge, Tenn. : distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Dept. of Energy, 2002

    Inherent in most engineered products is some measure of margin or over design. Engineers often do not retain design and performance knowledge so they can quantify uncertainties and estimate how much margin their product possesses. When knowledge-capture and quantification is neither possible, nor permissible, engineers rely on cultural lore and institutionalised practices to assign nominal conditions and tolerances. Often what gets lost along the way is design intent, product requirements, and their relationship with the product's intended application. The Engineering Index was developed to assess the goodness or quality of a product.

    Online OSTI

  3. Engineering index [electronic resource] : the quantification of uncertain margins and reliabilities with sparse data /.

    Washington, D.C. : United States. Dept. of Energy ; Oak Ridge, Tenn. : distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Dept. of Energy, 2002

    The Engineering Index (EI) provides a measure of goodness for engineered systems, subsystems, components, and product functions. The EI supports certification and planning endeavors by assessing both a product's current state as well as inferring how a system potentially changes over time relative to their requirements. This work will show how Bayes Theorem can be used to accomplish this inference. The inference available through EI allows decision makers to plan for, and possibly mitigate, problems ahead of a crisis by estimating how a product's changes impacts system performance.

    Online OSTI

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  1. Safi city plan. [G.S.G.S. 4241.]

    1942

    United States. Army Map Service. Alternate title: Safi. In upper left margin: Morocco 1:10,000. Lambert conical orthomorphic projection. N.W. Afric...

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