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Rescooped by Mercor from Supply chain News and trends onto Social Mercor
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SAP buys "stochastic" supply chain specialist SmartOps | Information Age

SAP buys "stochastic" supply chain specialist SmartOps | Information Age | Social Mercor | Scoop.it

Applications giant announces intention to acquire US company whose software applies algorithmic probability modeling to inventory planning.

 

German business software giant SAP has announced its intention to acquire SmartOps, a US-based supply chain optimisation software vendor.

SmartOps is a pioneer of the application of 'stochastic' probability modeling – which incorporates random, uncertain factors into probability calculations – to supply chain optimisation.

 

Its founder, Sridhar Tayur, is a professor of operations management at Carnegie Mellon University and is credited with "creating a market for inventory optimisation software". Tayur served as CEO of the company from its foundation in 2001 until last year.

SAP says that the combination of SmartOps's analytical algorithms with its HANA in-memory analytics platform would allow for "real time" supply chain management.

"SmartOps has developed large-scale, 'stochastic' algorithms that take the uncertainty and risk out of SCM processes," it says. "These algorithms use predictive analytics to help manage global distribution networks and vast, multi-stage supply chains.

"Such solutions would be significantly enhanced by SAP HANA, allowing for processing of high volumes of data in real time."

SAP already sells a demand signal management solution but says it will be "enhanced" by SmartOps's analytics software.

Privately-held SmartOps's customers include pharmaceutical giants Merck and Pfizer, and consumer goods maker Johnson&Johnson.


Via Ricard Lloria
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Scooped by Ricard Lloria onto Supply chain News and trends

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Rescooped by Mercor from 3D Printing in Manufacturing Today
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Building Body Parts With Software

Building Body Parts With Software | Social Mercor | Scoop.it
A company making tissue for drug tests using three-dimensional printers is teaming up with Autodesk to learn ways that industrial 3-D printing of inanimate objects can be adapted to make living things.

Via Kalani Kirk Hausman, ManufacturingStories
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Rescooped by ManufacturingStories from 3D Printing and Fabbing onto 3D Printing in Manufacturing Today

ManufacturingStories's curator insight, February 27, 9:30 AM

Check out our NEW Pinterest Page. Lots of great ManufacturingStories!
 https://pinterest.com/mfgstories/

Sworoba OyetKep's curator insight, March 11, 3:55 AM

The people at Organovo Holdings have teamed up with autodesk to design bioprinting machine. This machines main idea and fuction is to have the capability to print living tissues and hopefully move on to a more complex task such as organs. Although presentlyhe people at Orgnovo are able to create a slice of tissue, they require alot more hard work to reach their goal of being able to create a whole liver.Being able to recreate human body parts with the aid of 3d printing may not be so far off into the future. This would be music to the ears of people who have lost limbs or have been critically damaged in someway. This could also mean that we are able to sustain a elderly persons vital organs for longer period of time. 

Rescooped by Mercor from You Can't Make This Stuff Up
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A 3D printer that manufactures new cancer drugs with drag-and-drop DNA

A 3D printer that manufactures new cancer drugs with drag-and-drop DNA | Social Mercor | Scoop.it
Researchers from Parabon NanoLabs have developed a new drug for combating a lethal brain cancer called glioblastoma multiforme.

Via Sakis Koukouvis, olsen jay nelson, Christopher Baggett
olsen jay nelson's curator insight, December 11, 2012 7:04 PM

Moving ahead...

Christopher Baggett's curator insight, December 12, 2012 12:21 PM

3-D Printing is going to have a dramatic impact on our lives and I find the possibilities very exciting!

Hayley Regalado's curator insight, March 21, 10:49 PM

I feel like this is something out of a science fiction. But it is evident to expect the greatest technology advancements to be in the medical sector. This is an example of integrating medical technology with CAD (Computer Aided Design) styled software.