If you do a web search for the term "business intelligence" or "BI",
you'll get two points of view - one is focused on how to gather and
transform raw data into information and the other is focused on the
process of analyzing and utilizing the information for strategic
planning. Two parts of a whole, really, since there is no point
gathering a ton of data unless you can somehow put it to use. Plus it's
tough to make decisions about what your company/department/process
should do unless you have enough information to support those decisions.
That got me thinking again about how important it is that ExtendSim has
an internal relational database capability for storing and managing
data. An internal database serves as a bridge between the simulation
model and external data repositories, both to supply data to the model
and to report model outputs. It also helps that ExtendSim has robust
tools to facilitate the exchange of data with external sources. For
example, its ADO (ActiveX Data Objects) capability allows ExtendSim to
perform high speed data exchanges with external databases such as
Microsoft Access and SQL Server. And the ExtendSim DB Add-In for Excel
allows analysts to fully specify an ExtendSim database in Excel,
including parent/child relationships, formatting, and data validation,
and then retrieve useful information from the model without having to
learn anything about simulation or even how to use ExtendSim.
But the storage, management, and transfer of data is only one part of
the story. What is even more important is that the data gets used in a
meaningful manner. And that is where simulation comes in. Simulation is
a low cost, high reward method that allows you to analyze existing
processes and explore the effect of changes. Likewise you can get
assurance when designing completely new systems and processes since
you've simulated their behavior or performance in advance. An
intelligent way to do business.
Friday, March 21, 2014
Monday, February 10, 2014
A Peek into the Future of ExtendSim
With ExtendSim 10, under development
now, we are updating and overhauling every aspect of the ExtendSim®
application.
The development of this new version of
the ExtendSim application uses industry standard IDEs (integrated
development environments) for development on both Windows and
Macintosh platforms. On Windows we're using Microsoft Visual Studio
for our compilation and coding, and on
the Macintosh we’re using Apple’s Xcode. Of course, as it has
been for previous versions, the development language used for
ExtendSim 10 is C++.
Another aspect of our development
process that we are very excited about is we
are using a cross-platform application framework call Qt. Using Qt
gives us a huge advantage in that we can
leverage all the existing features of the Qt
framework and
quickly take advantage of any new features the
developers of Qt add to future versions. This means we can get new
features out to you, our end users, more quickly.
A partial list of the new features
planned for ExtendSim 10 that will come
to you with the help of these new development tools are:
- Multiple Notebooks
- Docking tool palettes
- Tear-off tabs in dialogs and worksheets
- Multiple undo
- Improved zoom
- Anti-aliasing
- Scaled text – editable while scaled
- Object grouping
- Object free rotation
- Object transparency/translucency
- Polygon – add/remove points (alt click on a segment.)
- Improved dialog editor
- Code completion improvements
- Graphics objects on the dialog box
- Thermometer column tag
- Multiple animation objects moving at the same time
- Improved Help system
- Ability to run on all current Windows and Macintosh operating systems.
- And many more improvements.
Of course posting information like this
always leads to the inevitable question,
'when will it be available?' At this point, our best response to that
is it'll be available when it's done.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Coveted
Emmy Award for Architect of ExtendSim
When
watching live television, we don’t think twice about how the images we see on
the screen are manipulated and morphed together. In the early days, live
television shows would simply cut from one video to the next. So you would see
a newscaster report on a story, then the screen would cut to a video of that
story.
In
1974, prior to fulfilling his dream of creating a simulation application that
would allow individuals in any discipline to use simulation, ExtendSim architect
Bob Diamond and colleague Steve Rutt invented the Video
Repositioner - a device to reposition broadcast quality video in real time.
With
this Video Repositioner, television and film apparatus could finally alter the
position of a video image without rescanning the originally generated image. So
a newscaster could report on a story and you could see the video running in
real time within the same screen.
Pretty cool invention!
This Video Repositioner was the
impetus to the creation of image processing devices such as the Quantel
DPE-5000 (motion
adaptive line interpolation allowing both field and frame information to be
used according to picture content), Grass
Valley Kaleidoscope (for digital effects such as wipes, keys,
recursive effects, mosaics, etc.), and Ampex ADO (digital special effects
which allow rotation and perspective of video images) used by television
stations and production companies including the CBS Television Network and
EUE/Screen Gems.
40 years later, this groundbreaking invention will be
recognized at the 65th annual Technology & Engineering Emmy®
Awards - honoring development and innovation in broadcast
technology and breakthroughs that have a significant effect on television
engineering. The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS)
awards Emmys to those involved in engineering technologies which either
represent so extensive an improvement on existing methods or are so innovative
in nature that they materially have affected the transmission, recording, or
reception of television.
The 65th
Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy awards will be presented on January 9,
2014 in Las Vegas, NV as part of the International Consumer Electronics Show. Imagine
That Inc. President Bob Diamond is honored to be recognized by the NATAS for his
Pioneering Analog Video Repositioner.
For more
information on the Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards, please go to http://emmyonline.com/tech_65th_recipients.
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