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On Mon, 13 Dec 2010 11:14:19 -0800, Richard Clark
wrote: On Mon, 13 Dec 2010 08:34:39 -0500, Registered User wrote: The phrase "80% antenna efficiency" contains both a unitless number and dimensional metadata. Actually, it doesn't - you are filling in the blanks with presumption. Given that "efficiency" has been hijacked, the phrase above could as easily relate to wind load. Precisely why metadata is so important to describe data.The generic term 'antenna efficiency' does not provide enough metadata to describe the true meaning of the measure. Some additional metadata turns the potentially ambiguous "80% antenna efficiency" into "the antenna's radiated power divided by its input power results in a percentage of 80%" 80% survival rate at 100 mph. I could well anticipate the counter-argument that "antenna efficiency" as you intend it is power based, and I would counter-counter that power delivered to the end user is far below 80% by 6 to 9 orders of magnitude. There is nothing efficient about 79.999999% of the power warming clouds and worms. HOWEVER, if the intended recipient receives even that miniscule power with full quieting, then it is in fact 100% efficient. In that regard, 80% and 100% as figures become meaningless when they are both applied to the same statement of efficiency. In this case the metadata describes the dimensional calculation used to produce the result. Remove the dimensional metadata and the phrase becomes "80%". No, efficiency in engineering terms has always been well understood and does not embrace this adornment. There are many different expressions that calculate efficiency, so wouldn't the adornment be the context aka metadata which describes the expression used to calculate the result? If I write "80% efficiency"on a piece of paper and hand it to an engineer, how can the engineer know what is 80% efficient without any metadata being provided? In an earlier posting I've seen the distinction of miles-per-gallon and passenger-miles-per-gallon stretched over the argument to fit it to efficiency. No, these two comparisons (and what you largely characterize as the need to include Metadata) are "figure of merit" measures. FOM is also dimensionless but demands the Metadata you speak of. The last sentence tells me you get it. 80% is a FOM with no UOM so for the value to have meaning metadata must be provided. FOM could easily lead you into a very energy (the engineering consideration) inefficient solution (due to social or economic considerations, eg. passenger-miles-per-gallon). The whole purpose of data analysis is to aid in effective decision making. Pretty much every decision requires some sort of trade-off. By analyzing and reporting upon the expression results that different combinations of dimension values provide, more information can be provided the decision makers. The decision makers are the ones who specify what data they wish to view (both dimensional data and the results of multi-dimensional expressions) and the ways they wish to view that data. All that information is placed in a multi-dimensional cube. The decision makers can slice and dice the cube data into how they want to view the data and determine relative FOMs for multiple scenarios. Their questions are which scenario model is most suitable and does the most suitable scenario provide a valid solution for the problem. AFA the passenger-miles-per-gallon calculation, the decision makers could decide that more information is needed in terms of greater granularity. Changing the granularity to stop-by-stop and providing associated passenger and fuel consumption statistics will deliver more information. The decision makers could also ask for data that provides social and economic information. The multidimensional PMPG expression could be changed to include the social and economic data. More data and metadata provides more information. The form of desired social and economic data and how it is to be used in expressions is something the decision makers must determine. All the information about required cube dimensions, attributes, hierarchies, expressions, etc, are determined by the decision makers. Those who build and load the structure have little say in the matter, the decision makers decide what data and metadata is useful for their analysis. An image of a simple multi-dimensional cube can be seen at http://books.google.com/books?id=AFC...page&q&f=false or http://tinyurl.com/337m42z Each dimensional intersection uses the same multi-dimensional expression (MDX) to provide a result. The UOM at each intersection is the same (dollars) but the results differ because different sets of dimensional arguments are used in the MDX. The amount $3,156,834 is raw data but the cube tells us it represents total sales for the Mythic World product in 2005. That metadata must be used to describe the result if that value is to be used away from the cube. Change that cube's dimensions and the values they contain to be antenna-related, add a few more antenna-related dimensions and attributes, create some expressions that use dimension values to provide appropriate measures and the structure could be used for antenna analysis. |
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