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34 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Over the Wall Design |
Design is split into separate groups that have very limited interaction with one another. This is consisted a bad design process. Fixed by concurrent engineering. |
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Three Measures of an Effective Design |
Product Cost, Quality, Time to Market |
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Four phase of Product Life Cycle |
Develop (Design), Produce and Deliver, Use, Retire |
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Engineering Specifications |
Measurable quantities related to customer requirements |
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House of Quality |
It's a thing. You should probably google it for examples |
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Parts of a House of Quality |
Customer Requirements, Customers, Engineering Specifications, Benchmarks (competition) |
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Kano Model of Customer Satisfaction |
over time, 'delight' features become a basic expectation |
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Trademark |
Type of Intellectual Property. Creates exclusive use of a logo or symbol. |
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Servicemark |
Type of Intellectual Property. Like a trademark, but for service goods. |
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Copyright |
Type of Intellectual Property. Offers exclusive ownership for 'original works of authorship.' |
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Trade Secret |
Type of Intellectual Property. Any information that is held confidential by a company. |
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Patent |
Type of Intellectual Property. Used to exclude others from use and implementation of an invention. |
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Five types of Intellectual Property |
Trademark, Servicemark, Copyright, Trade Secret, Patent |
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Utility Patent |
Granted to the invention of a process. (How something is done) |
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Design Patent |
Granted to the invention of a new or original ornamental design. (How something looks) |
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Plant Patent |
Granted to inventions regarding living organisms |
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Three types of patents |
Utility Patent, Design Patent, Plant Patent |
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How long are patents enforceable? |
20 years from the date of FILE for Utility or Plant patents. 14 years from the date of ISSUE for design patents. |
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What happens if patent fees are not paid? |
The patent term is ended. |
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In regards to patent law, what changed on March 16th, 2013? |
The US changed from first-to-invent, to first-to-file |
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What is the most important part of a patent? |
Claims (these define what is actually being patented) |
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Parts of the Executive Summary |
Objective, Procedure, Results, Conclusion |
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Morphological Method |
Develop and combine concepts from sub-functions using a functional decompostion |
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Brainstorming |
NOT BRAIN-WRITING. Generate and record ideas from all team members. No bad ideas |
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Brainwiritng/ 6-3-5 Method |
NOT BRAINSTORMING. 6 People, 3 ideas, 5 minutes. rotate papers and write ideas down |
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Analogies |
Team concept generation technique. Relate your design needs to similar products. |
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Using Contradictions |
Team concept generation technique. study the 'trade-offs' in your concept |
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Functional Decomposition |
Breaking a function down into smaller parts |
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Possible Defective designs |
Failure to use state-of-the-art design considerations, improper calculations, poor material were used, accepted standard were not followed |
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Potential Source of negligence charges |
Defective Design, Not including "proper safety devices," not foreseeing possible alternative uses. |
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Hazard |
A condition having the potential to cause harm or injury to people, animals, property, or environment HAZARD + RISK = DANGER |
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Risk |
The probability of an accident occurring when a hazard is present. HAZARD + RISK = DANGER |
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Danger |
The simultaneous occurrence of a hazard and a risk. HAZARD + RISK = DANGER |
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Methods for removing danger from a product |
Design out the hazard, safeguard against the hazard, warn of the hazard or risk, train away the risk, supply protection equipment |