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Overall Score : 90 / 100

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Course Description

This course will help you recognize how the "digital thread" is the backbone of the digital manufacturing and design (DM&D) transformation, turning manufacturing processes from paper-based to digital-based. You will have a working understanding of the digital thread - the stream that starts at product concept and continues to accumulate information and data throughout the product's life cycle - and identify opportunities to leverage it. Gain an understanding of how "the right information, in the right place, at the right time" should flow. This is one of the keys to unlocking the potential of a digital design process. Acknowledging this will enable you to be more involved in a product's development cycle, and to help a company become more flexible. Main concepts of this course will be delivered through lectures, readings, discussions and various videos. This is the second course in the Digital Manufacturing & Design Technology specialization that explores the many facets of manufacturing's "Fourth Revolution," aka Industry 4.0, and features a culminating project involving creation of a roadmap to achieve a self-established DMD-related professional goal.To learn more about the Digital Manufacturing and Design Technology specialization, please watch the overview video by copying and pasting the following link into your web browser: https://youtu.be/wETK1O9c-CA

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Instructor Details

Ken English

Ken English received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from the University at Buffalo in 2001, with his research focusing on using information technology and visualization to design and optimize complex, multidisciplinary system. Along with his research, Ken has worked in industry implementing digital solutions for sales and operations support in the food industry, plant layout in the chemical products industry, and with small companies looking to improve business performance. As a research site co-director of the NSF Center for eDesign (www.centerforedesign.org), Ken is working with several universities and over 35 corporate and governmental partners to combine industry needs with academic resources to bridge the gap between research and implementation. In 2002, Ken co-developed a course, "Information Technology in Engineering Design" The first of its kind in the country, the course focused on introducing engineering students to how information technology would transform their workplace. In 2012, working with colleagues at the University at Buffalo, was an instructor in the Knowledge-Driven New Product Development (KD-NPD) program. Ken's view of learning is that the most successful learners are those that pursue learning as a continuous activity. This requires a philosophy that learning is not a finite act, limited to a classroom and a syllabus, but an ongoing process. He approaches teaching as an endeavor to encourage and exercise the curiosity of a student's mind and dev

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Reviews

4.5

70 total reviews

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By Tejash y T G on 5-Dec-18

thank you

By Scott C on 26-Jul-18

Good overall introduction to the digital thread and it's various components

By AnkurS on 4-Jun-17

Fantastic!!....Great course for learning the basics of Digital manufacturing & Design as well Digital Thread.

By yashar k s on 28-Apr-18

Best Course

By Tejo R B on 13-Oct-17

Very Good course on Digital Thread, gained lot of knowledge in digital thread. Thanks to Ken.

By Deborah on 23-Oct-17

Excellent!

By Jimish S on 12-Apr-18

Let me start with thanking the faculty and Coursera for breaking down the course in a structured manner. The course was good as a starter pack for anyone who is new to the field and has little or no information technology background. For existing practitioners much of the content would be known, specially topics for Week 2. I have found publication from CIMdata informative and relevant in the context of Digital Thread and Digital Twin.

By Wesley T on 2-May-18

To understand thoroughly how Industry 4.0 is revolutionizing the means of production, we must understand the components of this revolution. This course explains a number of them.

By Mallela S V G on 23-Mar-17

Very helpful to understand the vital nature of information in product life cycle.

By K P k on 21-Jun-17

Nice Course.!!

By Vancho D on 10-Jan-18

This program is a must for every mechanical engineer and industrial engineer involved in product development and manufacturing in general.You must take it! It provides great information about Digital Thread Components

By OLUWAGBEMIGA O on 9-May-17

Great.