Matti Hannus
VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland
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Featured researches published by Matti Hannus.
Knowledge management in the sociotechnical world | 2002
Abdul Samad Kazi; Jari Puttonen; Mika Sulkusalmi; Pekka Välikangas; Matti Hannus
A clear understanding of what constitutes knowledge, knowledge management, knowledge processes (identification, collection, organisation, sharing, adaptation, usage and re-creation), and knowledge enablers (culture, technology, measurement, strategy and leadership) is essential. The aim is both to increase and to enable an individual to participate in decision making based on value-added information in addition to being in a position to exercise control over his or her work domain. This chapter advocates the appropriate use of technology for culture and social norms, which may be seen as a core need for knowledge management success. The coverage is primarily on knowledge know-how and, more so perhaps, minimal critical specification in terms of sociotechnical principles (Cherns, 1976, 1987).
DIISM '00 Proceedings of the IFIP TC5 WG5.3/5.7/5.12 Fourth International Conference on the Design of Information Infrastructure Systems for Manufacturing: Global Engineering, Manufacturing and Enterprise Networks | 2001
Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus
A core requirement for inter-enterprise collaboration in a virtual enterprise (VE) is the availability of an inter-enterprise Intranet service that facilitates the seamless flow of data and information between the different actors involved in addition to fostering an environment for collaboration. This paper is based on explorations and findings of trying to find/develop an inter-enterprise Intranet service for the participants of a virtual enterprise. Some required functionalities/support that were identified include: concurrent engineering, suitability to project business conditions, open system architecture, electronic document management, product structure/configuration management, access control, redlining/mark-up, groupwork support, user profiling, version and revision management, workflow management, distributed databases, application integration, and application launching. The paper concludes by illustrating an envisioned system architecture for inter-enterprise intranet services.
DIISM '00 Proceedings of the IFIP TC5 WG5.3/5.7/5.12 Fourth International Conference on the Design of Information Infrastructure Systems for Manufacturing: Global Engineering, Manufacturing and Enterprise Networks | 2001
Lauri Koskela; Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus
The paper starts with an exploration of the current conceptual underpinnings,paradigms and theories of production from the point of view of modelling. It is argued that modelling should bear on designing, controlling and improving production systems. Modelling should orient towards the existing three conceptual views on production: transformation, flow and value generation. Furthermore, modelling should cover both the physical process and the control information process. Finally, modelling should respond to the specific needs of virtual production in one-of-a-kind business, for example, the design of the production system accentuates. Two sets of modelling tools are analyzed against this framework: comprehensive modelling approaches and specific, more partial tools for virtual production. These results suggest that, at the level of research, the search for a unified conceptualization of production should be emphasized; only based on such a foundation can truly comprehensive and integrated modelling tools be constructed. At the more practical level, modelling efforts - in lack of tools based on a unified conceptualization - have to be partial; however, these efforts should be structured so that various modelling approaches could more easily be interfaced with each other, and the limitations of the particular tools in use should be clearly recognized.
DIISM '00 Proceedings of the IFIP TC5 WG5.3/5.7/5.12 Fourth International Conference on the Design of Information Infrastructure Systems for Manufacturing: Global Engineering, Manufacturing and Enterprise Networks | 2001
Pekka Välikangas; Abdul Samad Kazi; Jari Puttonen; M. Sulkusalmi; Matti Hannus
The creation and management of knowledge is considered a key enabler of value added business process delivery. This paper presents the findings of the main efforts towards knowledge creation at Fortum Engineering (FE), an engineering, procurement, and construction provider of power plants. Dealing with different levels of knowledge, it is necessary for FE to provide an environment that is able to translate and codify its tacit knowledge into explicit knowledge to support the definition of power plant configurations using expert applications. Where data or information is not available in a tangible form for translation, some mapping methodologies may be used to render the tacit knowledge meaningful and usable. FEs suggested, knowledge creation and management environment involves; mining of data structures to capture and transfer information into the appropriate knowledge level, manual and automated inputs and rule definitions to capture and manage knowledge on different knowledge levels, and the correlation of knowledge and its data or information source using mind mapping tools. The focus of this paper is to first justify the need for knowledge creation at FE and then to illustrate the envisioned knowledge creation environment. Key phases of the knowledge creation process are furthermore explained.
Journal of Information Technology in Construction | 2001
Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus; Jarmo Laitinen; Olli Nummelin
Archive | 2002
Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus
Archive | 1999
Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus; Chotchai Charoenngam
Archive | 2007
S. Boudjabeur; A. W. Malone; Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus
Archive | 2007
Abdul Samad Kazi; Bern Martens; Alain Zarli; Matti Hannus
Archive | 2000
Abdul Samad Kazi; Matti Hannus