DocumentCode
1365252
Title
Engineering workstations: A field report: Interviews with engineers having access to CAE workstations yield mixed responses; amidst the praise are complaints of insufficient power and excess complexity
Author
Wallich, Paul
Volume
21
Issue
12
fYear
1984
Firstpage
52
Lastpage
57
Abstract
Interviews with electronic engineers reveal the benefits and shortcomings of CAE (computer-aided engineering) workstations. There was general agreement that workstations make it possible to complete designs more quickly and improve their overall quality. They also allow engineers working alone or in small groups to tackle much larger designs than they could otherwise. However, simulation is seen as a weak point, as are slow speed and lack of good interfaces with other computer. Bringing workstations into a `mature company´ is contrasted with building a startup company with workstations in mind from the beginning. The value of workstations in producing designs meeting severe constraints is also discussed.
Keywords
CAD/CAM; engineering workstations; CAD/CAM; CAE; computer interfaces; computer-aided engineering; electronic engineering; engineering workstations; simulation; Arrays; Companies; Computer aided engineering; Integrated circuit modeling; Software; Workstations;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.1984.6370376
Filename
6370376
Link To Document