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Table 8. Major appliance manufacturers and production centers Manufacturer Networked appliances
"... In PAGE 14: ... 2. Production All Japanese manufacturers of networked appliances are handling production within Japan ( Table8 ). Although some components are made overseas, final assembly is always carried out in Japan.... ..."
Table 1 Center Cost Per
1996
"... In PAGE 29: ...TRS Abstracts Table1 - 2. (continued) NTRS TRSFull NTRS Remarks Text ARC 4/95 11/95 Omitted until linkage resolved CASI 1/94 1/95 NA NA Abstracts only DFRC 1/95 1/95 1/95 1/95 All full text documents MSFC 11/95 11/95 11/95 11/95 Some full text documents JSC 12/95 Omitted until firewall setup KSC 9/95 9/95 9/95 9/95 All full text documents SSC 8/95 8/95 8/95 8/95 All full text documents Uniform Resource Locators (URL) Uniform Resource Locators (URL) have been identified for all the NASA Centers participating in the Technical Report and Public Affairs Information Servers by the following two sections of this joint technical memorandum.... In PAGE 33: ...Table1 - 6. (continued) Old Steps Cycle Time Steps Each center prepares for 1 day Mailing by mailroom 1 day internal mailing and mails Total Estimated Cycle 4 to 6 weeks Total Estimated Cycle 1 to 2 days Time Time Potential Productivity Improvement: Receipt of end product from 6 weeks to 2 days Proposed Cycle Time Comparing Tables 1 - 3 and 1 - 4, cost savings are not significant, whereas the cycle time for receipt of the Headquarters Telephone Directory is significant, i.... In PAGE 37: ... Old Steps Prepare Fact Sheet Headquarters review Prepare Master for Printing Prepare Work Order Headquarters Fact Sheets, Hard Copy Cycle Time Issue as prepared Not applicable 1 to 5 days 1 day Proposed Steps Prepare Fact Sheet as an integrated PostScript file with graphics and text Each center prepares and sends via EmaiI,Fact Sheet in source format for review to Code P Transmit PostScript file as an attachment to E-Mail via LISTSERV to each Center. A second file will be sent in accordance with Table1 - 9 Each center pointof contact prepares Job Ticket and sends to DocuTech where applicable for copies Cycle Time Issue as prepared 1 day 1 to 3 minutes per center Set Labeling where available on DocuTech 1 hour Sent to GPO Term 4 to 6 weeks Print copies (1 to 10 pages At rated speed, page per Contractor for printing per copy) minute of duplicator 1 - 5 days 1 day Distribution to each center for distribution Mailingby mailroom Each center prepares for internal mailing and mails Cycle time included during printing 1 day Total Estimated Cycle 4 to 6 weeks Total Estimated Cycle Time 1 to 2 days Time Potential Productivity Improvement: Receipt of end product from 6 weeks to 2 days The steps involved for the generation of the HTML files for the Fact Sheet availability on the Public Affairs Home Page are displayed by Table 1 - 10.... ..."
Table 1. Cornell Theory Center: Wall Clock and Processor Time Means and Coe - cients of Variation
1997
"... In PAGE 3: ... Nevertheless, it is still possible to calculate the system-wide CVs and the CVs when jobs are classi ed by user, degree of parallelism, and queue. The wall clock times and processor times are presented in Table1 . The CV for several categories is calculated using a weighted mean.... In PAGE 3: ... All other categories are given a weighting in proportion to the number of jobs in the category. From the results in Table1 , it is evident that, in general, classifying jobs by 2 Their de nition of utilization is the percentage of processors allocated to active jobs. 3 Categories have to include at least ve jobs to be included in the results so that... In PAGE 4: ... This enforcement of a maximum duration can lead to lower CVs. The only entries in Table1 where the CV for a category is greater than the system-wide CV is for the wall-clock time for jobs in the short 15 minute and 3 hour queues. This could be because these are the primary queues used for development, testing, and debugging, while the longer queues are used for production jobs.... ..."
Cited by 63
Table 4 : Coffee production over several years, household level averages
"... In PAGE 15: ... Now, we concentrate on the export crop, coffee. Table4 shows the evolution of coffee cultivation over several years. For the whole of Rwanda, about half of the peasants were cultivating coffee in 1989.... In PAGE 16: ... It is not surprising then, that towards the end of the eighties, farmers started ripping out coffee trees, an act forbidden by penal law. Table4 on coffee production already showed that the average coffee income in Rwanda decreased by 1/3 in the course of 3 years (1989-1991). This general decline was due to decreased production per tree, but masked big differences between prefectures.... ..."
Table 1. % d errors with offset and centered metrics.
2003
"... In PAGE 17: ... This grid is intended to severely test the accuracy and robustness of the advective d equation solution process. Table1 gives % d errors for different k with offset (Equation (3.5)) and centered metrics.... ..."
(Table 2.2). Both total factor productivity and total productivity show severe drops that
1999
Table 1. Production cycles and part-routings of the 70 parts ( L : Lathe, MC : Machining center).
in Zagazig,
"... In PAGE 11: ... A global feeder receives batches of raw parts from input of the FMS; it moves the parts to the local buffers in accordance with the scheduling planned by the software system. Table1 shows the production plans of the 14 different parts used in the example for the scheduling of 120 operations in a batch of 70 parts (five objects for each different part). For this example, Rossi and Dini concludes that the rule-oriented algorithm that use traditional dispatching rules like FIFI, LIFO, SPT, and LPT give a make-span of 56 minutes and the Genetic Algorithm without the Gradient-Based Parameter Optimization give a make-span of 57 minutes, and REGAL performs a real-time scheduling in 0.... ..."
Table 2 1996 North Carolina Reportable Motor Vehicle Crashes for Drivers Ages 15-20 by Crash Severity and Police-Reported Alcohol Involvement Crash Severity*
Table 1: Tau-pair production at e+e? colliders, past and present. Center-of-mass energies are in GeV.
"... In PAGE 1: ... Among these are the complementarity of low and high energy environments, the interplay between inclusive and ex- clusive measurements, the necessity of boot-strapping to achieve a coherent experimental picture, and the importance of applications to other physics. 2 Event Samples Signi cant samples have been produced over the past two decades by the e+e? colliders listed in Table1 . In both eras, experiments have been done at lower and higher energies.... ..."
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