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Digital Smart Factory Forum 2002
March 6-8, 2002
Hyatt Regency Airport
Orlando,
Florida
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SPONSORED
BY:


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PAPER
GUIDELINES & TOPICAL SUGGESTIONS
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The deadline for tutorial and paper proposals has past.
Every finished paper properly submitted will be published.
The following guidelines apply:
1.
Submit a short Summary of Proposed Paper articulating your
topic and perspective. Also sketch the major topical areas
of your presentation. Each Summary can be text only and should
be no longer than 500 words.
2.
The author needs to indicate their commitment to present their
full paper at the conference event. Your paper may be presented
and/or published on the Digital Smart Factory website. While
you do not have to present to be published, it is our goal
to have as many presentations and discussions at the conference
as time permits.
3.
Each Summary of Proposed Paper needs to be submitted by November
20, 2001, to the Research & Engineering Council:
recouncil@rivnet.net.
Below
are some suggestions for papers with their rationale. We are
open to variations of these topics and completely new topics.
Be sensitive to the need for papers with a system perspective.
Papers and presentations with either commercial or product
focus will be rejected.
The topics
listed below are suggestions only. Do not limit yourself to
our preliminary thoughts. We are looking for cutting edge
thinking and practices that will help define the evolving
discipline of Smart Factories.
Topical
suggestions:
Tutorials:
1.
Color strategies for automation - what does it take to
get a reliable, flexible stream of color information to actuate
and control an end-to-end color production process? What components
go into an enterprise color strategy that includes process
control, color management, simulation (proofing), pressroom
color strategy, and setting/fulfilling customer expectations
in an automated world.
2.
CIP4/JDF implementations - This tutorial has potentially
two sections: First, a review of XML and JDF basics. This
could be a briefer version of the 2001 presentations where
the origins and structure are "laid out". And also
what new developments have there been in the worlds of XML
and JDF?
Second, what are the classes of products announced so far?
What are theirdelivery timeframes? Feature/functionality?
What areas of the supply chainthat these products address?
What are the dynamics/timeframes for industry conversion?
3.
Database technologies and metadata - Data is the new source
of value in our businesses. This tutorial articulates the
anatomy of data architecture for a modern enterprise. With
an emphasis on the print manufacturing organization, this
basic tutorial treats the fundamentals of databases, their
use, their characteristics, and how metadata is used as a
fundamental tool in today¹s digital workflow environment.
Also, considered is how database structures vary across a
graphics sup-ply chain and finally, the
differences between such things as DAM, media asset management,
content management, document management, etc.
4.
XML and SGML systems, intended for computer-to-computer
exchange without (or with mini-mal) human intervention, require
constructs such as DTDs or schema that set formal rules for
structuring documents, and require embedded parsers (e.g.,
validators) in systems that can verify the integrity and
structure of tagged data along each step of the business and
production process.
Experienced
buyers of markup-enabled systems know how to select parsers
and construct DTDs/Schemas and instances to benchmark systems
before buying. During this tutorial we will hear from experienced
markup systems users to learn how to benchmark equipment,
establish S.O.P. for markup-enabled systems, and buy smart.
Whitepaper
suggestions:
1. An
alternative to engineering a comprehensive automated production
environment is DIY ap-proach utilizing "off-the-shelf"
components. How can component packages by configured into
automated workflows? What are the logical limits of automated
workflows built from compo-nents utilizing scripting and such
technologies as Markzware MarkzNet or Global Graphics MaxWorkflow?
How comprehensive a workflow can be constructed from component
parts? What are the strengths and weaknesses of such systems?
2.
Page construction - The whole concept of CIM in publishing
falls down if the creative envi-ronment is itself chaos. Tools
are entering the market that go beyond workflow, in order
to allow managers and MIS to:
- Associate
metadata and rights data at the point of creation
- Enforce file naming conventions and relating documents and
images to workflow database.
- Sychnronizing content and document components across locations
and across enterprises.
- Extracting and metadata directly from applications
Combined
with more "traditional" workflows and preflight/validation
tools, the creative environment can now be automated.
3.
Pressroom systems and automation - If presses are treated
as "cells" of a CIM system, what do press production
management systems look like? How are they "aligned"
with enterprise level business ans production systems? How
do new markless and register guidance systems work? What kinds
of new linkages are likely between the pressroom and bindery
especially given JDF? (This whitepaper could be linked with
tutorials on color strategies and CIP4/JDF implementations.)
Also consider: Sophisticated printers with large web presses
and in-line finishing operations can spends shifts (not hours)
setting up for a job. What will it take to cut this time significantly?
Can/does CAD help? Also, how do distributed operations manage
multiple press rooms?
Or, agreed-upon
formulas for color material placement and setup on newspaper
presses are common. But the overall issue of imposition-color
placement instruction set needs examination.
4.
Bindery systems - The bindery topic may need, in addition
to whitepapers, a tutorial on the current state of the technology.
Examples of topics for whitepapers: Can we learn about automated
handling techniques by examining sophisticated digital color
print systems? In relation to heatset web offset
operations, what are the next hurdles in data-drives-the-folder
set-up of finishing lines?
After
all submissions are received, the R&E Council and IDEAlliance
will communicate back to each author which papers have been
selected for presentation, which papers have been selected
for publishing in the conference proceedings, additional details
on the requirements for the full white paper, and all other
pertinent information necessary regarding the conference itself.
The R&E
Council and IDEAlliance wish to thank you for your interest
and support in this topic area. We believe the future printing
plant will be a "Digital Smart Factory". We need
your help in getting us there.
IDEAlliance
© 2002 All Rights Reserved. 100 Daingerfield Road
Alexandria, VA 22314 P: 703 837-1070 F: 703 837-1072
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