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Design in the New Millennium: Advanced Engineering Environments: Phase 2 (2000)

Chapter: Appendix E: Participants in Committee Meetings

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Participants in Committee Meetings." National Research Council and National Academy of Engineering. 2000. Design in the New Millennium: Advanced Engineering Environments: Phase 2. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9876.
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Appendix E

Participants in Committee Meetings

The full committee met four times between June and December 1999. Many smaller meetings were attended by one or more committee members and representatives of public and private organizations involved in the development and/or use of advanced engineering environments. The small group meetings were part of the committee's information-gathering process. Outside participants are listed below, grouped by organization:

Aerospace Corporation

Dwight Abbott

Ron Bywater

Andrew Dawdy

Ted Mohaugh

Sandy Page

Tom Trafton

Air Force Research Lab

Dee Andrews

Army Research Institute

Steve Goldberg

BCI, Inc.

Dennis White

The Boeing Company

David Kasik

Concepts ETI, Inc.

David Japikse

Electric Boat Corporation

John Alden

Fred Harris

John Holmander

Eric Jay

Pete Landry

Tom Skrmetti

Don Slawski

Andy Stoddard

Internet2 Central Laboratory

Jaron Lanier

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Stewart C. Loken

Microsoft Research

Jonathan Grudin

NASA Headquarters

Murray Hirschbein

Sam Venneri

NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

David Atkinson

Pat Liggett

Knut Oxnevad

Mike Sander

Peter Shames

David Smith

Steve Wall

Bill Weber

NASA Langley Research Center

Doug Craig

Brantley Hanks

Arlene Moore

Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Participants in Committee Meetings." National Research Council and National Academy of Engineering. 2000. Design in the New Millennium: Advanced Engineering Environments: Phase 2. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9876.
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National Institute of Standards and Technology

Albert Jones

National Science Foundation

Suzi Iacono

Raytheon Systems Company

Steve Olson

Solectron

Kim Hyland

Shrinivas Raos

Terri Zee

Sun Microsystems

Roger Day

Jack Herzog

Ron Melanson

Peter Rado

Cindy Reese

University of North Carolina

Prasun Dewan

U.S. Navy

Wendy Lawrence

Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Participants in Committee Meetings." National Research Council and National Academy of Engineering. 2000. Design in the New Millennium: Advanced Engineering Environments: Phase 2. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9876.
×
Page 65
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Participants in Committee Meetings." National Research Council and National Academy of Engineering. 2000. Design in the New Millennium: Advanced Engineering Environments: Phase 2. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9876.
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America is changing. Many of the most noticeable changes in day-to-day life are associated with the advancing capabilities of computer systems, the growing variety of tasks they can accomplish, and the accelerating rate of change. Advanced engineering environments (AEEs) combine advanced, networked computer systems with advanced modeling and simulation technologies. When more fully developed, AEEs will enable teams of researchers, technologists, designers, manufacturers, suppliers, customers, and other users scattered across a continent or the globe to develop new products and carry out new missions with unprecedented effectiveness. Business as usual, however, will not achieve this vision. Government, industry, and academic organizations need to make the organizational and process changes that will enable their staffs to use current and future AEE technologies and systems.

Design in the New Millennium: Advanced Engineering Environments: Phase 2 is the second part of a two-part study of advanced engineering environments. The Phase 1 report, issued in 1999, identified steps the federal government, industry, and academia could take in the near term to enhance the development of AEE technologies and systems with broad application in the U.S. engineering enterprise. Design in the New Millennium focuses on the long-term potential of AEE technologies and systems over the next 15 years. This report calls on government, industry, and academia to make major changes to current organizational cultures and practices to achieve a long-term vision that goes far beyond what current capabilities allow.

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