It is 7 AM and North Pole is bathing in the first light of dawn reflecting from the snow. The Great Hall, ground zero of operations and logistics, is hustling and bustling with elves gathering for their morning briefing. Sugarplum Mary, the North Star Elf-Chef, is serving hot cocoa with fresh peppermint and gingerbread cookies.
Today, Intercax received a call from Mrs. Claus, the heart and soul of operations and logistics at North Pole. Seven days from the finale and at a time when hope and love cannot be delayed, Santa’s mission is at risk. Evolution of the Sleigh Delivery System (SDS) over the years has resulted in disintegrated silos
SysML v2 is the next generation Systems Modeling Language for modeling complex systems that significantly enhances precision, expressiveness, usability, interoperability, and extensibility over SysML v1. SysML v2 is in its finalization phase at the Object Management Group (OMG). It includes three standard specifications: KerML 1.0, SysML 2.0, and Systems Modeling API and Services 1.0 (aka
A key benefit of the Syndeia digital thread platform is that it enables the user to retrieve data from all the federated repositories through a single interface, the Syndeia Cloud REST API. This and the next several Jupyter notebooks released with Syndeia 3.5 will each focus on a specific repository type. This post will cover
In Part 1 of this series, we connected individual requirements in DOORS NG to requirements and other elements in SysML. Greater challenges arise when we need to map requirement structure and organization between tools, because different tools organize requirements in significantly different ways. SysML tends to organize requirements in simple tree hierarchies using containment relationships.
Syndeia 3.0 offers a new option for a DOORS NG interface for MagicDraw and Rhapsody SysML modeling tools. The integration of requirements databases with system architecture modeling (SysML) is of high value to the practitioners in the field of MBE/MBSE. Although several solutions have been offered in the past, they address only the basic use case(s). Syndeia
The Internet of Things (IoT) holds enormous promise of new capabilities for users and new opportunities for businesses. It also presents enormous challenges to systems engineers. Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) potentially provides an efficient way to address those challenges, being holistic, integrated, flexible and object-oriented. To explore this promise, Intercax has started a series of