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Computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) is manufacturing supported by computers. It is the total integration of Computer Aided Design / Manufacturing and also other business operations and databases.

This term has generally been replaced by Manufacturing Process Management in the wider field of PLM - Product Lifecycle Management.

Some components of CIM are: CAD, CAPP (Computer-aided process planning), CAQ (Computer-aided quality assurance), CAM (Computer-aided manufacturing).

Definition according to the Computer and Automated Systems Association of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers: "CIM is the integration of total manufacturing enterprise by using integrated systems and data communication coupled with new managerial philosophies that improve organizational and personnel efficiency."

In 1993 the European Union ESPRIT programme carried out an investigation on how the trade-off between manual labour and automation affects the quality of the resultant products.

Computer Integrated Manufacturing | コンピュータ統合生産

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Computer Integrated Manufacturing".

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