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There are regular user conferences. Its architecture makes COMOS suitable for engineering: it can manage large quantities of data and provide it on an integrated basis. Siemens cooperates in the standardization of export and import interfaces (DEXPI - Data Exchange in the Process Industry), [3] an initiative together with BASF, Bayer, and ...
SIMATIC is a series of programmable logic controller and automation systems, developed by Siemens. Introduced in 1958, the series has gone through four major generations, the latest being the SIMATIC S7 generation. The series is intended for industrial automation and production. The name SIMATIC is a registered
Their process was known as the Siemens–Martin process or Martin–Siemens process, and the furnace as an "open-hearth" furnace. Most open hearth furnaces were closed by the early 1990s, not least because of their slow operation, being replaced by the basic oxygen furnace or electric arc furnace .
The Siemens process is the most commonly used method of polysilicon production, especially for electronics, [12] with close to 75% of the world's production using this process as of 2005. [ 13 ] The process converts metallurgical-grade Si , of approximately 98% purity, to SiHCl 3 and then to silicon in a reactor, thus removing transition metal ...
Siemens SPPA-T2000 Control System (formerly Teleperm XP) Siemens SPPA-T3000 Control System (For Electrical Power Generation Control) Siemens PCS7 (process control system) for Process Industries and Oil & Gas; SiPass Security; SiVeillance Command & Control; SPC Intrusion systems
Siemens Digital Industries Software (formerly UGS and then Siemens PLM Software) is an American computer software company specializing in 3D & 2D Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) software. The company is a business unit of Siemens , operates under the legal name of Siemens Industry Software Inc , and is headquartered in Plano, Texas .
Connectivism was first introduced in 2004 on a blog post which was later published as an article [6] in 2005 by George Siemens. It was later expanded in 2005 by two publications, Siemens' Connectivism: Learning as Network Creation and Stephen Downes' An Introduction to Connective Knowledge. Both works received significant attention in the ...
In 1966, through a major restructuring process, these main companies merged to form Siemens AG. [3] The restructuring placed Siemens AG in a position to consolidate and diversify its operations, and be an integrated player in all domains: engineering, power generation, industry, rail systems, defence, and information & communications technology.