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First Scottish Systems Engineering Convention

29th November 2001 @ Glasgow

The FIRST SCOTTISH SYSTEMS ENGINEERING CONVENTION took place on 29th November 2001 at the Teacher Building, St Enoch's Square, Glasgow. Speakers included Professor John Roulston OBE, FRSE of BAE SYSTEMS, Andy Low, the deputy Technical Director of Thales, James Kirby, head of the QinetiQ (formerly DERA) Systems and Software Engineering Centre, and two established experts of the UK Systems Engineering scene, Professors Derek Hitchins and Philip McPherson. The conference was timed to increase awareness of systems engineering and capability maturity as the Scottish Centre for Embedded Software was launched.

Programme

 

08:30 - 09:15

Coffee & Registration

09:15 - 11:00

Session 1 - Risk and Complexity in Government and Industry: 

11:00 - 11:15

Tea / coffee break

11:15 - 13:15

Session 2 - Exploiting New Technology - “From Microsystems to Macrosystems”

  • Systems Engineering in the Context of High Risk Development Programmes - Prof. J.F.Roulston OBE, FRSE
  • Radical Solutions with new Technology: Systems Level Integration - Professor Steve Beaumont, ISLI
  • Scottish Embedded Software Centre - James Kirby, QinetiQ
13:15 - 14:15

Lunch

14:15 - 15:30?

Session 3 - System and Product Development in the 21st Century

15:30? - 15:45?

Tea / coffee break

15:45? - 17:00?

Session 4 - The People in the System                                        

18:00? - 22:30?

Drinks Reception & Dinner

  • Round table discussion and/or St Andrews Night entertainment at the Grosvenor hotel.

A bus will transport delegates at around 17.30 to the Grosvenor hotel off Byres' Road for drinks and the conference dinner. Directions will be available for car drivers. A bus will take people back to the George Square area and hotels in the town centre in time for the 23.00 train to Edinburgh.

Who should attend?

  • Government decision makers who need a better understanding of why small decisions can have big and unexpected consequences, and of what has to be done to ensure that systems and organisations meet stakeholder expectations and work robustly and safely

  • Industry leaders and managers who want to increase their organisation’s customer focus, improve their development process, and satisfy legislative and competitive demands for robust, high integrity, high added value systems and products

  • Individual engineers who want to be able to “think systems”, see the wider context of their work, and develop products and systems which will be competitive in the global marketplace

  • Academics with an interest in systems engineering, systems science and product development.

 

Primary Contacts

 

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Last Updated: 09 March, 2006