RFP responses MM related

Hi All
We are likely to get a RFP from one of our client, i have been asked to ready to respond to the RFP with questions and other related information from MM perspective. I have basic idea about what is RFP but have no experience on reponding on to the RFP and suggesting a solution.
Can some one let me know the link for a good RFP and also reponse given to it from MM point of view.
regards
mohammed

Hi Mohammed,
A good way of handling your first RFP would be to split the approach into the following groups:
Software (Release/Component/Version)
Hardware (Specific needs as per the business scenario)
Solution approach
Assumptions
Exclusions
Risk, etc.
With this approach, you will get all your doubts listed into one place.
Hope this helps
Cheers
Keshav

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    Hello,
    I'm using LabVIEW 8.5.1 and I have modeled and simulated a plant I'm developing within a Simulation Loop (attached) and now I want to go and implement the system, but it doesn't appear to be as simple as just dropping the transfer functions and putting DAQ Output and Input VIs in as specified in the "Introduction to LabVIEW in 3 Hours for Control Design and Simulation" tutorial for this particular system. I have a Maxon RE-40 brushed DC motor and a HEDS 5450 encoder interfaced with an EPOS 24/5 positioning controller that communicates with my PC through an RS-232 cable. Can someone talk me through how I can communicate with this system with the VI I already built for simulation purposes?
    Thanks,
    Brian
    Attachments:
    Control System V8.vi ‏215 KB

    Well you have the simulation running right? The point of the transfer function is to represent the response of the physical system right? Well replace the transfer function with the routines for writing values to the system and reading the response that relates to the transfer function output.
    Mike...
    Certified Professional Instructor
    Certified LabVIEW Architect
    LabVIEW Champion
    "... after all, He's not a tame lion..."
    Be thinking ahead and mark your dance card for NI Week 2015 now: TS 6139 - Object Oriented First Steps

  • Connection Failed While Importing Metadata

    Hi All,
    I have installed 11.1.1.6.2 Client on my machine and while i am trying to import metadata it throws an error saying "Connection Failed". Can some one help me how to resolve this ?
    Regards,
    Vishal BVR

    I did google it but all the responses were related to the Server versions but not client, none of them answered my question. And coming to your suggestion do you mean that we need to provide full TNS entry i.e.
    ORCL =
    (DESCRIPTION =
    (ADDRESS = (PROTOCOL = TCP)(HOST = localhost)(PORT = 1521))
    (CONNECT_DATA =
    (SERVER = DEDICATED)
    (SERVICE_NAME = orcl.us.deloitte.com)
    or do you want me to mention just ORCL in the DSN name during the import metadata step from the RPD.

  • How to change the Horizontal Frequency?

    I can change the resolution, but not the frequency (Hz) why?
    Since I live in Sweden, a PAL land, I'd like to make sure my DVDs run at 75Hz. Running a DVD at the default frequence (which doesn't show, and I don't know how to find out) it looks like it converts PAL 50 Hz to 60 Hz, which is terrible.
    (and yes I'm a newbie

    I think I'm sort of right. I found this on the web talking about LCD displays:
    Refresh rate, response time, flicker and motion-blur
    There seems to be a lot of confusion and mis-information on these topics on the web; here's my clarification...
    Refresh rate is the rate at which the electronics in the monitor addresses (updates) the brightness of the pixels on the screen (typically 60 to 75Hz). For each pixel, an LCD monitor maintains a constant light output from one addressing cycle to the next (sometimes referred to as 'sample-and-hold'), so the display has no refresh-dependent flicker.
    There should be no need to set a high refresh rate to avoid flicker on an LCD.
    Response time relates to the time taken for the light throughput of a pixel to fully react to a change in its electrically-programmed brightness. The viscosity of the liquid-crystal material means it takes a finite time to reorientate in response to a changed electric field. A second effect (which has a rather more complicated explanation) is that the capacitance of the LC material is affected by the molecule alignment, and so if a step change is brightness is programmed, as the LC realigns the cell voltage changes and the brightness to which it settles is not quite what was programmed. Unless 'overdrive' (which tries to pre-compensate for this effect) is employed, it may take several refreshes before the light output stablises to the correct value. Response rate for dark-to-light is normally different from light-to-dark, and is often slower still between mid-greys. VESA and others define standard ways of measuring response time, but a single figure rarely tells the whole story.
    Manufacturers 'response times' rarely tell the whole story.
    Unless combined with a strobing backlight, response times much below 16ms are likely to be of only marginal benefit, owing to more-dominant 'sample and hold' effects (see below),
    The visual effect of motion blur is self-explanatory and it is fairly intuitive to realise that a slow pixel response-time will cause this problem. What is less obvious, but at least as important in causing motion-blur, is the 'sample-and-hold' effect: an image held on the screen for the duration of a frame-time blurs on the retina as the eye tracks the (average) motion from one frame to the next. By comparison, as the electron beam sweeps the surface of a cathode ray tube, it lights any given part of the screen only for a miniscule fraction of the frame time. It's a bit like comparing film or video footage shot with low- and high-shutter speeds. Motion-blur originating from sample-and-hold in the display can become less of an issue as the frame (refresh) rate is increased... provided that the source material (film, video, or game) contains that many unique frames. For LCD TV there is significant interest in the industry in strobing (flickering!) the backlight deliberately so as to reduce sample-and-hold motion-blur!
    Glor

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