Talk:Operations research
From Academic Kids
OR/Industrial Engineering
The first draft (9 March 2002) could use some work. In particular, can anyone clarify the relationship between OR and industrial engineering? Also, are there other OR "tools" that should be listed? -Brady Hunsaker
This is a great article, thanks! Maybe a link to mathematics somewhere would be good, since I believe OR is often classified as applied mathematics. Is numerical analysis a tool that should be listed? AxelBoldt
I added a reference to applied mathematics. That certainly is important. I've never met an OR professional who has listed numerical analysis as a direct tool, though it is used implicitly sometimes. Based on that, I'm not going to add a reference to numerical analysis, but anyone who has a different experience is free to do so. Actually, the article currently (29 Mar 2002) only reflects my view of OR, so it would be nice if other OR people would make improvements, or at least suggest them here. -Brady
Wicked Problems
What are "Wicked Problems"? --Khendon 07:20, 24 Nov 2004 (UTC)
- I've been reading google links on this subject for 20 minutes and I still have no idea what they are. I'm gonna have to call BS on this. Unless someone can explicitly state what these things are with some good examples, I'm voting to remove the link. Monkeyman 19:08, 24 Nov 2004 (UTC) P.S. The "Wicked Problems" article is on VFD here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Votes_for_deletion/Wicked_problems). Add your input if you like.
Wellington Damage
The Wellington was a twin-engined aircraft that shouldn't go down if one engine was killed. (Unless it's a badly underpowered twin, which appears unlikely.) If it could come home on one engine, it would occasionally come home with damage on that "one particular point", so the example seems illogical --172.181.14.113 11:40, 21 May 2005 (UTC)
- "In particular the analysis noted that the Vickers Wellington suffered no damage on one particular point of the engine nacelle. This spot turned out to be in front of the oil cooler, if the cooler took a single hit the engine would eventually sieze and the plane would not make it home."
