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Awards
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Ambassador Network
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UCF Student Chapter
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Orlando Chapter December 2009 Meeting
(7 December 2009)
Here's how the give-away works: 1. You will be asked an INCOSE related trivia question. 2. Everyone writes down their answer. 3. Everyone who gets the correct answers gets to put a raffle ticket in the "hat". 4. We draw from the hat and give away a prize (usually gift certificates or prizes ranging from $10 to $100). 5. We repeat until prizes are gone. One gift per attendee. If you win more than one time you can give the prize you hold or won to another guest (who has not won) of your choice. The more you know about INCOSE and the local chapter activities, the better your odds. Of course, we also feed you. It's fun! Come join us. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Orlando Chapter November 2009 Meeting
(13 November 2009)
About the Presentation: Human Systems Integration (HSI) is the management and technical approach to incorporating human considerations into the design and implementation of systems. HSI is an essential enabler of improved systems performance, enhanced safety, and reduced cost in railroad applications. As a technical practice, HSI requires a "double integration", first integrating across the identified human domains: Manpower, Personnel, Training, Human Factors Engineering, Survivability, Safety and Occupational Health. The second integration occurs when solutions that optimize human considerations are integrated into the systems engineering activities. This results in systems designed to achieve the desired outcomes with the best combinations of humans, hardware, and software. While primarily used in military materiel acquisition, HSI in infrastructure such as transportation results in better systems. Organizations such as railroads achieve safety and operational effectiveness goals that translate to reduced operational expenses over the long term and improved perception of the infrastructure. The underlying technical approaches based in the human domains are the same across organizations employing complex, large-scale technologies, although the organizational and management aspects may be different. The "stakeholders" (people or organizations with legitimate interest in a system) might be different and the requirements of these different stakeholders might be different, but they are just as important, even if in railroads these stakeholders are more challenging to define. This effort to identify and include stakeholders is part of the HSI management approach. This presentation will include ongoing work to identify potential courses of action to introduce the technical and performance advantages of HSI and to apply those advantages to railroad technology development. This will include potential alterations in the technical work of the individual domains as well as the technical and managerial issues that result from the various reports up, down, and across the stakeholder organizations as well as recommendations for technical activities that actively support success in this infrastructure domain About the Speaker: Jennifer McGovern Narkevicius, PhD is CEO/Managing Director of Jenius LLC whose clients have included the US Air Force, US Navy, and the US Federal Railroad Administration. She facilitates clients’ efforts to define and develop the interactions of the human with the other elements of systems. Throughout her career, Jen has worked in Human Factors Engineering and Human Systems Integration, focusing on identifying and defining the systems requirements that include human capabilities and limitations. She has worked in research, development, test and evaluation of diverse programs in high performance military aviation; civil aviation; rail and road ground transportation; as well as distributed networked social and work interactions, supported decision making, and design of web based enterprise applications. Previously, she served as an officer in the US Navy. Dr. Narkevicius is member of International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), American Society of Naval Engineers, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Association of Computing Machinery, The Ergonomics Society, American Psychological Society, the Association of Old Crows, and Women in Defense a National Defense Industry Association affiliate. She holds a PhD in Cognitive Psychology from the University of Florida, with master’s degrees in Systems Engineering, Adult Development Psychology and Special Education: Gifted and Talented. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Systems Engineering & Human Systems Integration (HSI) Tools Working Together
Full Day Tutorial: Friday, November 20, 2009, 8:30 - 4:30 held at General Dynamics C4 in the Research Park Integration: Using Systems Engineering and Human Systems Integration Tools Together to Enhance Design Topic introduction by Dr. Waldemar Karwowski To accurately define system requirements, the inherent capabilities and limitations of the user populations, the work environment, and the context in which the system will operate must be analyzed. Incorporating the data from analysis of humans in SE processes contributes to establishing accurate boundaries for the trade space and defining the successful system performance, ensuring that the complete system will perform as envisioned in the operational environment. This includes defining and incorporating requirements driven by people in and around the system as well as incorporating the body of knowledge about human contributions to performance into systems engineering practice. Expectations for reduced cost, smaller workforces, improved training, and better user interfaces to equipment and facilities have made it increasingly important for HSI practitioners to be integrated into system design and to have a thorough understanding of the place of HSI in systems engineering and acquisition. In addition, systems engineers must have an understanding and an appreciation for the technical matter of HSI to ensure the tradespace is fully exercised to result in an optimized solution. One means of ensuring successful technical integration is to link HSI tools with SE tools, yielding richer tradeoffs and improved design and performance of the entire system. Primary HSI tools focus on modeling, requirements analysis and tradeoffs within the human domains. One of the current challenges is that many of the HSI tools do not directly feed or align with SE tools, resulting in data that must be tailored prior to use or integration into related SE tools. Techniques such as top-down functional analysis, work methods and measurement engineering, human-computer interaction, personnel training impacts, and human performance modeling will be presented. These engineering methods are presented at an introductory level, but with sufficient detail to allow practitioners to understand the HSI principles involved and to gauge the level and quality of effort required to apply the principles to design projects. This tutorial will focus on identifying the HSI tools that should be used in SE process and practice, what data translations may be required, and the expected utility of the products. Building on the systems engineering design framework HSI will be discussed as a major component of system development and acquisition. Throughout the session, emphasis will be placed on engineering design strategies to facilitate operator interactions, reduce manpower and training requirements, and increase personnel safety and quality of life while enhancing system performance. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION Orlando Chapter October 2009 Meeting
(5 October 2009)
About the Presentation: The presentation is about Project Engineering Responsibility and Applications and importance of it for a successful Project. About the Speaker: Caroline is Project Engineer working in Northrop Grumman. She has over 20 years of experience in the aerospace and defense industry. Caroline has a BS in Electrical Engineering and MS in Electrical Engineering. She has Program Management Certifications from DAU. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Orlando Chapter September 2009 Meeting
(12 September 2009)
About the Presentation: The presentation will consists of three sections, General description of a program or project organization. Then description of the Program Management (PM) and System Engineering (SE) processes. Lastly scope of SE documents prepared on a program or project. About the Speaker: Dave is president of Krigelman and Associates, Inc., based in Melbourne, FL. His company provides technical support services in system engineering, program management, and proposal development to assist companies in satisfying contract requirements and to obtain new business. Prior to formation of the company, he had over 34 years of experience with GE Aerospace and Martin Marietta Corporation in the aerospace and defense industry. He performed system, subsystem, and unit design engineering tasks as an individual contributor and held both functional engineering and program management positions. Dave has a BS in Mechanical Engineering from Drexel University in Philadelphia, PA Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. INCOSE Orlando Receives Chapter GOLD Award! Congratulations to all the members in the Central Florida Area.
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Information Security Systems Engineering and Cryptography
Full Day Tutorial: Friday, August 21, 2009, 8:30 - 4:30 held at SAIC Building 2 Information Assurance Tutorial: Information Security Systems Engineering and Cryptography This tutorial discusses the security of information in its transmission, storage, and processing states. The responsibilities of the security engineer and the techniques used to assure information security are included. Threat categories, risk, and control method selected use NIST as standard. Risk management matrices allow for sizing the threat and the value and immediacy of a response to a breech or 'incident'. Recommended timelines for intervention and inspection, as well as IPT formation summarize the course. International law and organizational cost are considered as the full spectrum of security throughout the acquisition/technology/logistics lifecycle for a system/program or organization are addressed. The course is offered in 2 modules for the day: data systems security (Information Security Systems Engineering), and the methods of encoding toward security ('cryptography'). CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION Orlando Chapter August 2009 Meeting
(20 July 2009)
About the Presentation: The accessibility of technology and the on line global market is revolutionizing media based industries and nearly every other aspect of our lives. This presentation examines some of the causes and effects of this, and its impact from a systems engineering perspective. About the Speaker: Mark Biddle has worked for over 17 years as an engineer and technical manager in government and industry. Mark has functioned as Director of Systems Engineering for SAIC's Orlando Business Unit and President of the INCOSE Orlando chapter. During the past 2 years he has been self employed as a writer/film maker/artist and has been experimenting with media based technologies, applications, and business opportunities. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. During the July Chapter Meeting, Tom Herald, Vice-President presents Penny Beierschmitt with an award for the fine work conducted on the Orlando Chapter Newsletter. Congratulations Penny!
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Systems Engineering Development and Management
Full Day Seminar: Thursday, July 30, 2009, 8:30 - 5:00 held in the Institute for Advanced Systems Engineering (IASE) @ UCF Tutorial Description - Systems Engineering Development and Management Systems Engineering Development and Management Technology Training (Limited to 30 attendees) This hands-on tutorial begins with high-level requirements development in DOORS with the tight governance and trace-to-change requests for those requirements managed by ClearQuest. The governance of requirements changes and the traceability of those changes would be provided by the DoorKeeper for ClearQuest. A high-level SysML model comprised of several packages will be maintained in separate files to demonstrate management of the model using ClearCase (configuration management system) and engineering change requests to the model through ClearQuest. This will illustrate tool power to manage large teams (e,g, IPTs) that may have ITAR or EAR restrictions or other 3rd party proprietary access restrictions. Using the SysML model we will create traceability from the model artifacts to the requirements in DOORS and synchronize these as we make changes. This exercise will be done using DOORS and the DoorKeeper. More detail in the SysML model will be filled in to create behaviors and allocate them to the structure created from the exercise. This provides a foundation to simulate the model to show some problems missed during requirements development phase. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION Orlando Chapter July 2009 Meeting
(07 July 2009)
About the Presentation: What is Organizational Culture and Leadership all about? The quest for top organizational performance. The questions that all Managers / Leaders and Smart Employees need to ask: What is Organizational Culture? How does it affect success? How can I assess it? How can I change it? Why Engineers should learn about it? About the Speaker: Dr. Piotr Windyga received his System Engineering degree in 1985 from the University of Los Andes, Merida-Venezuela, his Magister in Biomedical Engineering in 1987 from the Simon Bolivar University, Caracas-Venezuela, and his Doctor degree in Medical Imaging in 1994 from the University of Rennes I, Rennes-France. A former consultant in clinical informatics for oil and pharmaceutical companies, Dr. Windyga has conducted several research projects related to expert systems in medicine, the automatic interpretation and 3D reconstruction of medical images, modeling and simulation of complex real-time biomedical systems, and cost-effectiveness analysis of medical intervention for potentially disabling illnesses. Some of these projects led to commercial products. Among the grants Dr. Windyga has received are several from hospitals and the US Army. He has more than 20 refereed publications in international journals and co-authored a medical imaging book. Dr. Windyga authored undergraduate and graduate curricular material for careers in Systems Engineering, Information Technology, Health Information Technology and Healthcare Systems Engineering. His current interests include systems thinking in health care, use of information technology to better assess patient status and evaluate new medical technologies, and medical processes modeling for evidence-based decision making. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Orlando Chapter June 2009 Meeting
(02 June 2009)
About the Presentation: In the world there are many areas of tension in the political, social, economic, religious, and commercial spheres, just to name a few, that seem to have no resolution. Most of the problem stems from the differences of personal experience, from competing goals, from differences of depth of understanding of relevant areas, as well as from the influence of personal egos. In the development of systems, as complexity of systems increase, things are not much different. When system complexity is great enough, it is difficult for any one person to understand all of the areas well enough to know that that there is no impact at the system level from a decision made at the detail level. Many assumptions are made about the level of work done at the component levels. Sometimes there are differences of interpretation of specifications (often to the advantage of one party or another). Many times the specification is incomplete because the system designer does not know everything he or she might need to know to correctly develop the specification. And many times, holes exist because an issue was not investigated thoroughly enough due to budget and time constraints. The question arises, how does anyone understand a complex system well enough to minimize the consequence of risk? Modeling, analysis, prototyping, exhaustive testing at each level of integration, etc., are the typical tools necessary to minimize the risk. But when individuals bring their different perspectives together and assumptions are made about how things fit together, holes result and problems can be hidden, sometimes having serious costs when later discovered. If a system gets to the level of complexity of the economy, the environment, or even world religious views, how does one determine the best course of action to minimize the risk of consequence? This presentation will discuss a methodology for understanding a system at any level of complexity, even when many details are missing. About the Speaker: Mr. Tucker graduated from MIT in 1985 with a degree in physics and continued graduate studies there related to lasers and systems while working at Sanders in Nashua, NH. While at Sanders he was a key contributor to the early research and development of laser based infrared countermeasures and was involved with the very first successful jamming by an airborne laser based system of a live fire heat seeking missile at White Sands Missile Range. In 1996 he left the defense industry and snowy New Hampshire to work for ADE Optical Systems in Charlotte, NC as the project and optical engineer developing laser scanning and detection technology for 300mm wafer inspection systems. A year later he started his own company to develop 3-D image capture and printing systems. In 2003, the down economy caused him to go back into the defense industry and he worked for DRS in Melbourne, FL as the project engineer for the transition to production of the Arrowhead thermal imagers for the Apache helicopter. In 2005 he took a position at Northrop Grumman Laser Systems where he has served as a project engineer and as a lead systems engineer on a number of targeting and laser projects. . Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Orlando Chapter May 2009 Meeting
(28 April 2009)
About the Presentation: Run-Time polymorphism has been used in the software community for 20 years to satisfy dynamic reconfiguration, plug-n-fight, extendibility, and system redundancy requirements. RTP is also used to construct software Systems of Systems. Systems engineers are now having the same requirements applied to the system architecture. This presentation will explain this technology and show how it can be applied to system architecture. About the Speaker: Jeff Bryson has his masters in Computer Science from FIT and has working in the commercial and defense software industry for over 25 years and has worked for Sprint Telecom, NASA, Perot Systems and has been a Computer Science Instructor at DeVry University. Mr. Bryson is a staff software engineer at Lockheed Martin Simulation, Training & Support in Orlando FL. He is a IBM certified SOA associate and has presented at INCOSE and OMG conferences. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Orlando Chapter April 2009 Meeting
(14 April 2009)
About the Presentation: Overview of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) and Systems Engineering Applications, Challenges which consists of Analytic Boundaries, Operations, Training, Safety Record and other Socio-Technical issues. Covering some of Ethical issues. The challenges of Supporting UA Systems. Discussing the Impact of loadwork and Situation Awareness. This includes system requirements, integration and system acceptance. About the Speaker: Jerry Gordon is a lead Systems engineer with the Orlando office of the AAI Corporation, a division of Textron Systems. His current project is the development of a training simulation for the RQ-7 Shadow Unmanned Aircraft System. He has worked on several UAS programs with a concentration in human systems integration (HSI). He graduated from the US Naval Academy with a degree in Marine Engineering and served as a nuclear qualified naval engineer for eight years. He has over ten years of experience in the private sector developing simulations and C4I systems for a number of DoD programs. He is currently pursuing a Masters in Human Factors and Systems from Embry Riddle Aeronautical University. Note: Note that it's the 4th Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. Human Systems Integration (HSI) in the DoD System Acquisition Process
Full Day Seminar: Friday, April 17, 2009, 8:30am - 5:00pm at General Dynamics C4 in the Research Park Tutorial Description - Human Systems Integration (HSI) Human Systems Integration (HSI) in the DoD System Acquisition Process Within the DoD acquisition process - the days of building a "neat widget" without the participation of its intended user are, hopefully, behind us. Increasingly a system's successful operation depends upon its interaction with, and the performance of, its users or operators. This dependency upon the integration of humans (e.g. operators or users) and systems to operate effectively establishes a need for engineers to deal with it rigorously. Across DoD acquisition programs there is an increased emphasis to ensuring that the "human" is fully and continuously considered early and throughout the development process. Including the user feedback in the design is imperative, but when and how you integrate this feedback, and what impact on the design this user feedback will ultimately have is the challenge. Human Systems Integration (HSI): Per MIL-HDBK-46855A, HSI is a comprehensive management and technical strategy to ensure that human performance, the burden design imposes on manpower, personnel, and training (MPT), and safety and health aspects are considered throughout system design /development. HSI assists with the total system approach by focusing attention on the human part of the total system equation and by ensuring that human-related considerations are integrated into the system acquisition process. DoD Regulation 5000.2-R mandates a strong HSI strategy early in the acquisition process. The composition of a DoD HSI program may encompass as many as nine technical domains, depending on the specific acquisition program and the sponsoring service. The HSI domains may include the following elements or constituencies: human factors engineering, manpower, personnel, training, safety, health hazards or occupational health, human survivability, habitability, and environmental safety. The objective of any HSI program is to integrate and facilitate the acquisition program's trade-offs among the different HSI domains. The trade-offs may be primarily driven by the program's engineering scope/complexity, overall goals, schedule, and, of course, available funding. This workshop examines the use of engineering methods for early phases of the acquisition, such as concept definition, for systems that require significant human-systems integration for successful operations. The use of modeling languages, such as SysML, to provide the engineer with a means to quantitatively examine different allocations of functionality between humans, hardware or software is examined. Additionally new validation strategies, which are required because the response of individual humans will be different for the same set of circumstances, are introduced. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION CLICK HERE FOR HSI Presentation CLICK HERE FOR HSI ROI Presentation The International Council on Systems Engineering Spring 09 Conference
April 02 - 04, 2009 Virginia Modeling, Analysis and Simulation Center (VMASC), Suffolk, VA
Please see the attached Agenda and Event Descriptions. You may now register or obtain the latest information at www.incose-spring09.org http://www.incose-spring09.org The conference theme for the INCOSE Spring 09 Conference is Systems Engineering -Affordable Success. It focuses on the means and tools to lead and create processes or organizations that develop affordable systems. It is known that systems complexity has dramatically increased over the last several decades. It is therefore even more important to develop leaders and processes to more cost effectively track development costs, calculate complexity, and leverage known solution and techniques. Sponsors are still being accepted. If you have any questions, please contact Conference Chair Karl C. Geist at kgeist@md.metrocast.net or 301-475-5646. CLICK HERE FOR AGENDA INFORMATION CLICK HERE FOR EVENTS INFORMATION CLICK HERE FOR TUTORIAL INFORMATION CLICK HERE FOR HOTEL INFORMATION Orlando Chapter March 2009 Meeting
(04 March 2009)
About the Presentation: Overview of Burnham Institute for Medical Research is dedicated to revealing the fundamental causes of disease and devising the innovative therapies of tomorrow. Burnham is a not-for-profit, bi-coastal institute with operations in California and Florida . Burnham ranks among the top four institutions nationally for NIH grant funding and among the top 25 organizations worldwide for its research impact. Burnham is establishing a world-class research center dedicated to the study of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular complications. Why this focus? The obesity epidemic is driving an alarming increase in the incidence of diabetes, which has more than doubled in the last 15 years. Heart disease is the leading cause of death of diabetics About the Co Presentation: Rick intends to share his own observations about the general absence of systems engineering thinking and methods in the healthcare information technology arena, and the ways in which his INCOSE membership has helped him cope with, and adapt to, the levels of informality he finds at his various healthcare clients. He'll discuss his data warehouse development projects at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York, and for Defense Health Services Systems (DHSS) in Washington, DC. Both environments would benefit from an increased level of systems engineering rigor, presenting a possible opportunity for additional INCOSE outreach into the healthcare IT industry. Rick will describe how his membership in INCOSE enabled him to make a smooth transition from the private Mount Sinai setting to the defense-oriented DHSS, where the terminology of systems engineering is paramount but the presence of actual systems thinking is only slightly more formal than in the private sector. About the Speaker: Cyril Doucet as the manager responsible for overseeing the stand-up of the new Burnham facility in Lake Nona, Orlando area. His experience includes the application of Medical Research and Management throughout the system life cycle from conceptual design research, through development and full medical center. About the Co Speaker: Rick is an IT quality consultant with 30 years of experience specializing in data warehousing and the application of quality principles to information systems. He holds a Ph.D. in Management from Walden University, and is a certified Six Sigma Black Belt. He is a member of the Enterprise Information Systems Steering Committee of the Health Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS), and is also active in the American Society for Quality, where he holds a certification as a Software Quality Engineer (CSQE). Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. JACMET (Joint Alliance of Companies Managing Education for Technology) Engineering Symposiums
Systems Engineering symposium sponsored by JACMET in Arizona. April 23rd 2009. LINK Orlando Chapter February 2009 Meeting
(21 December 2008)
About the Presentation: While patterns are all around us in the natural world, as engineers, we do not have a formal approach to patterns in systems engineering. This presentation will provide a research based approach to identifying and applying patterns in systems engineering. About the Speaker: Robert Cloutier is a Research Associate Professor in the School of Systems and Enterprises at Stevens Institute of Technology. He has over 20 years experience in systems engineering & architecting, software engineering, and project management in both commercial and defense industries. His interests include systems engineering patterns, systems architecting, MBSE, SysML, and architecture management. Rob belongs to the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), IEEE and ACM. He received his Ph.D. in Systems Engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology, an M.B.A. from Eastern University, and a B.S. from the United States Naval Academy. Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. OMG Systems Modeling Language (OMG SysML (TM))
Full Day Seminar: Friday, January 16, 2009, 8:30am - 5:00pm at SAIC in the Research Park Tutorial Description - Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) The OMG Systems Modeling Language (OMG SysML(TM)) is a general-purpose graphical modeling language for specifying, analyzing, designing, and verifying complex systems that may include hardware, software, information, personnel, procedures, and facilities. In particular, it provides graphical representations with a semantic foundation for modeling system requirements, behavior, structure, and parametric equations that can integrate with a broad range of engineering analysis. SysML represents a subset of UML 2.0 with extensions needed to satisfy the requirements of the UML(TM) for Systems Engineering RFP. This tutorial provides an introduction to how SysML can address the needs of the systems engineer. It includes background and motivation, an overview of the SysML diagram types and language concepts, and selected sample problems to demonstrate how the language can be used as part of a typical SE process. Additional information including this tutorial, vendor information, and papers, can be found on the OMG SysML website at http://www.omgsysml.org/. Training materials include the presenters' book, A Practical Guide to SysML published Fall 2008. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION Orlando Chapter January 2009 Meeting
(21 December 2008)
About the Presentation: Overview of OMG Systems Modeling Language (OMG SysML(TM)) general-purpose graphical modeling language for specifying, analyzing, designing, and verifying complex systems includes graphical representations with a semantic foundation for modeling system requirements, behavior, structure, and parametric equations that can integrate with a broad range of engineering analysis and book signing. About the Speaker: Sanford Friedenthal is a Principal Systems Engineer at Lockheed Martin and currently leads an effort to enable model based systems development (MBSD) across the corporation. His experience includes the application of systems engineering throughout the system life cycle from conceptual design, through development and production on a broad range of systems in aerospace and defense. He has been a systems engineering department manager, and a lead developer of advanced systems engineering processes and methods including the Lockheed Martin Integrated Enterprise Process and the Object-Oriented Systems Engineering Method (OOSEM). Mr. Friedenthal was a leader of the Industry Standards effort through the Object Management Group (OMG) and INCOSE to develop the Systems Modeling Language (OMG SysML (tm)) that was adopted by the OMG in 2006. Sanford is co-author of the recently published book titled "A Practical Guide to SysML". Note: Note that it's the 3rd Thursday of the month. Also note that the location is the new SAIC building right next door to the existing SAIC building. Hope to see you there. 2007 Headlines 2006 Headlines 2005 Headlines 2004 Headlines |
March 2010
Welcome
INCOSE Orlando is a local chapter of INCOSE International.
It is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to providing a
forum for professionals practicing the art and science of
Systems Engineering in the Greater Orlando Area.
Joining INCOSE Orlando
We're always looking for new members to participate in
our chapter activities.
If you're interested in joining INCOSE, use the
Membership
Application Information located on the national INCOSE web
site. When asked to specify a Local Chapter, please consider
accepting our invitation to designate INCOSE Orlando as your home chapter.
INCOSE Orlando Listserver
INCOSE International provides an email listserver for our chapter.
If you'd like to keep up with chapter activities via email, please contact our
Communications Committee.
Provide your name, employer contact info (i.e., work address and phone number),
and email address, and we will add you to our list and stay in touch!
INCOSE Is Here For You
If you have ideas and suggestions for helping the chapter serve the interests
of local System Engineers, please pass them on to a member of the
current Board of Directors.
Better yet, volunteer your time and services and get actively involved
in helping the chapter flourish.
INCOSE in Central Florida
There are two additional INCOSE chapters located in Central Florida;
Tampa and Space Coast. Check their web sites for more information.
INCOSE Space Coast INCOSE Tampa |
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