In this publication a widespread phenomenon is studied: in many usage scenarios modern complex machines show a significant difference between the maximum sustainable performance available in well specified environments and the average performance many users experience in their everyday interaction with the machine. This performance gap appears to be increasing with technical progress and performance of machines.
Although this situation is probably well known to many readers — and very often not so quietly endured — it was not studied systematically so far. This publication describes the conceptual background of the performance gap in a very general way. It develops a semi-quantitative description and points to approaches to reduce the performance gap in current and future environments.
Process executives, engineers and system analysts will hopefully benefit from this approach especially in the dynamic environments envisioned in initiatives like the German Industrie 4.0.
Tabella dei contenuti
Introduction.- Concepts and Definitions.- Derivation and validation ot the gap formula.- Applications.- Conclusion.Circa l’autore
Prof. Dr. Wilhelm Nüßer studied physics at RWTH Aachen with a focus on theoretical and mathematical aspects. After several years at SAP he join the FHDW – University of Applied Sciences in Paderborn, Germany, as Heinz Nixdorf foundation professor. He authored many publications in national and international media and led several research projects. Since 2010 he is active in the leading edge cluster it’s OWL.Thilo Steckel studied agricultural sciences at Bonn University and specialized in process management. After 2 years working at a federal institute of soil sciences he joined CLAAS in 1994. CLAAS is a family owned manufacturer of mobile agricultural machines. He is currently working as senior project manager in the advanced engineering department of CLAAS E-Systems. Major research topics are data management and logistics.