Customer Reviews
On this page we will publish customer reviews of the book. Currently we can
not provide you with a form, but please mail your review to pdmscm_book@cs.lth.se.
Excellent guide to SCM-PDM Integration, July 12, 2003
Reviewer: Alexis Leon from Cochin, India
Product Data Management (PDM) is a class of enterprise software that manages
product data and relationships-facilitating innovation and increasing engineering
productivity. It allows you to manage, control, and access data surrounding
new product design, engineering, and manufacturing processes. By providing controlled
and secure global data access, PDM empowers the organization to deliver higher-quality
products to market faster and more efficiently. This process impacts the entire
life cycle of a product, as employees at each phase in the product development
process can access the right information at the right time.
Software Configuration management (SCM) is the discipline of identifying the
configuration of a system at discrete points in time for purposes of systematically
controlling changes to this configuration and maintaining the integrity and
traceability of this configuration throughout the system life cycle. SCM is
a collection of techniques which coordinate and control the construction of
a software system. Today's software systems consist of a myriad of component
parts each of which evolves as it is developed and maintained. SCM ensures that
this evolution is efficient and controlled, so that the individual components
fit together to form a coherent whole.
So we can say that while PDM ensures that the product development goes on smoothly,
SCM make sure that the software development is done efficiently. Today most
products-both hardware and software-are becoming more and more complex. Another
fact is that in today's environment neither software nor hardware can exist
in isolation. Software is the integral part and the driving force in almost
all machines and systems from mission critical applications like controlling
the operations of satellites and Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs),
air traffic control (ATC) systems, managing the functioning of banks and hospitals,
handling the airline and railway reservation systems and so on to performing
mundane tasks like operating a door locking system.
In the past the SCM and PDM disciplines have existed and evolved with little
interaction. The SCM and PDM disciplines can help an organization to achieve
greater efficiencies in its product development, marketing and customer support
efforts. But the days of SCM and PDM working in isolation are gone. To survive,
thrive and successfully compete in today's highly competitive business environment,
the organizations must conceive, build, test and market high-quality products
in the most efficient and effective manner. The customer support, bug fixes,
product enhancements, product evolution, etc. must be done quickly (at internet
speed) and with minimum wasted effort. In order to achieve these goals, the
SCM and PDM disciplines must be integrated.
Only when the hardware and software development teams fully understands what
is happening in the 'other world', only when the hardware-software boundaries
disappear and only when the seamless information integration occurs between
the hardware and software development environments, the organizations will be
able to realize their full potential and become market leaders. If this is to
happen, then the organizations should integrate their SCM and PDM efforts.
The book "Implementing and Integrating Product Data Management and Software
Configuration Management" does an excellent job in teaching and guiding
the organizations/practitioners to integrate their SCM and PDM disciplines successfully.
The easy-to-read and engaging writing style combined with the excellent organization
of the book has gone a long way in making the topics of SCM and PDM accessible
and interesting to the readers.
The book contains 5 sections-Basic Principles of PDM and SCM, Similarities
and Differences between PDM and SCM, Integration and Deployment, Case Studies
and Tools and Standards Survey. The book develops the basics of both SCM and
PDM from grounds up so that the reader who is not familiar with either discipline
will not have to go elsewhere for understanding the concepts of SCM or PDM.
For experts in the field, the introduction to the basics acts as a refresher.
Once the basics and concepts are established the authors get down to the business
of detailing the methods and strategies of integrating PDM and SCM. The authors
provide detailed descriptions of PDM and SCM integration processes so that the
users can get a clear picture of the benefits of SCM-PDM integration. This is
followed up with 6 excellent case studies from multinational organizations like
Sun, Ericsson, ABB, etc. These case studies are worth their weight in gold as
they illustrate the challenges and opportunities of the SCM-PDM integration
efforts.
The last section consists of the SCM and PDM resources, brief descriptions
of SCM and PDM tools and so on. This section also gives a short but excellent
overview of Document Management System and its relation to SCM and PDM and a
list of document management tools. Another very useful chapter in this section
is the one that describes the major SCM, PDM and document management standards.
This book is a MUST read for engineers, developers and managers who develop
today's sophisticated systems. This book is ideal for people who are trying
to or who are entrusted with the task of integrating the SCM-PDM efforts of
their organizations. This book will also be very useful for the SCM/PDM professionals
who want to learn about the other discipline and how it relates to their own
profession.
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