1 / 31

Welcome to the Montreal MIS Tutorial

Welcome to the Montreal MIS Tutorial. MIS Tutorial. What is an MIS What is the MIS role in JDF Introduction Gray Boxes MIS Requirements Job Costing. CIP4 Reference Model. CIP4 Reference Model. Product Definition / Intent Communication between print customer and printer

tameka
Download Presentation

Welcome to the Montreal MIS Tutorial

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to the Montreal MIS Tutorial

  2. MIS Tutorial • What is an MIS • What is the MIS role in JDF • Introduction Gray Boxes • MIS Requirements • Job Costing

  3. CIP4 Reference Model

  4. CIP4 Reference Model • Product Definition / Intent • Communication betweenprint customer and printer • Fully “Intent-Based” • Today: mostly non-JDF • JDF used for job definitionin Quotes and Orders • PrintTalk used for definitionof the business transaction • CIP4 Product Definition WG

  5. CIP4 Reference Model • Process Definition • MIS managedenvironment • MIS created initialjob (ID and Ticket) • Purely“Process-Based” • MIS creates “Process”nodes or “Gray Boxes” • Production Managerexpands Gray Boxesto Process nodes • JMF used for feedback

  6. MIS and JDF/JMF

  7. MIS and JDF • MIS gets customer view of job (Intent) • MIS converts Intent to Process by doing job planning, estimating and scheduling

  8. MIS and JDF • MIS creates the initial JDF ticket (Process) • MIS submits JDF ticket to production • MIS receives JMF for job tracking

  9. MIS and JDF • MIS receives JDF back after completion • MIS submits JDF to next production step

  10. Introduction to Gray Boxes

  11. Intent to Process conversion • Customer’s view of job is description of “what” to produce not “how” to produce • MIS needs to convert the “what” (Intent) into the the “how” (Process) • For some Processes MIS can create full Process definition (all Resources) • For many other Processes MIS does nothave enough technical detail / knowledge • Solution: Gray Boxes

  12. Gray Boxes • For many Processes the MIS does not know: • The exact Processes required • The exact order of the Processes • The parameters of all Processes • Examples: • Pre-Press: Screening angles, Trapping params • Result: MIS cannot create valid JDF

  13. Gray Boxes • Solution (in simple words): • The MIS writes in the JDF what it knows = TheGray Box • The production system add what it needs = Expanding the Gray Box • By operator input or applying defaults • The production system informs the MIS what it has done • Using JMF Signals of type NewJDF

  14. Gray Box - Example • Example from Pre-Press

  15. Gray Box - Example

  16. Gray Box - Example

  17. MIS Requirements

  18. MIS and JDF/JMF • JDF • Replacement for “Paper job ticket” • JMF and Audits • Replacement for “Shop floor data collection”

  19. Shop floor data collection • Staff time and attendance • Complete record of staff time (9 to 5) • Job costing • Complete record of actual production cost • Work in progress (WIP) • Complete record of cost of jobs in production • Equipment utilisation statistics • Complete record of machine time • Production and Non-Productive

  20. JMF vs. Audits • Audits are only available for jobs • Productive time • JMF can be used for job related time • Productive time • Up to JDF 1.3: Audits are the only accurate source of job costing data • The reason for JDF snapshots up to JMF 1.3 • From JDF 1.4: Reliable JMF Channels • JMF only way to record non-job related time • Non-Productive time

  21. Work In Progress • Value of actual costs on jobs in production • Like value of stock in warehouse • Calculated on Daily, Weekly, Monthly basis • Is used to calculate company’s profitability • Used by accountants and auditors • Must be very accurate • close enough != good enough • The reason for Audit snapshots in JMF 1.3 and Reliable JMF Channels in JMF 1.4

  22. MIS / Production Interaction • Base+MIS-ICS Level 1 (Job Tickets Only) • Job submission • Returned JDF with Simple Audits • Base+MIS-ICS Level 2 (adds Job Tracking) • JMF Status Signals (fire and forget) • Full Audits in JDF Snapshots and Returned JDF • Base+MIS-ICS Level 3 (adds Job Costing) • JDF 1.3: JDF Snapshots in JMF Signals • JDF 1.4 (proposed): Reliable JMF Channels

  23. JMF Signals

  24. JMF Signals • Status Signals • Report Device and Job Status • Used for Job Tracking • Used for Job Costing (hours component) • Resource Signals • Report Resource Comsumption / Production • Used for job Costing (material component) • Used for Job Tracking (Plates been made?) • Events / Notifications • Report special events and milestones • Used for Errors, Job Completion reporting, Archieving, etc

  25. JMF Status Signals • JDF snapshot (1) • Up to JDF 1.3: JMF Signals a “fire and forget” and therefore “unreliable” • There is no guarantee that all Signals arrive at MIS • WIP must be accurate, therefore MIS must get complete job costing information • In JDF 1.3: JDF snapshot is only available mechanism to get accurate costs for jobs that have not yet been returned to MIS

  26. JMF Status Signals • JDF snapshot (2) • Must contain: • Process node that is executing (not complete JDF if non-spawned JDF was received) • Complete AuditPool including Audit for “this JobPhase”

  27. JMF Reliable Signals • JMF Reliable Signals • From JDF 1.4: JMF Signal channels can be made “Reliable” • To guarantee that all Signals will arrive at MIS • Signals must be acknowledged by receiver • Signals must be repeated if not acknowledged • From JDF 1.4: JMF can be used to get accurate costs for jobs that have not yet been returned to MIS

  28. JMF Status Signal

  29. JMF Resource Signals • Create JMF when: • A Resource is (partly) consumed • Media • Paper, Plates • UsageCounters • A Resource is (partly) produced • ExposedMedia • Plates • Preview • Component

  30. JMF Resource Signals

  31. Thank You

More Related