9 years & the vibe is stronger than ever at #sww10

All checked in and squared away at #sww10 (fancy twitter hashtag speak) for SolidWorks World 2010. Years of road warrior-ing has finally paid off and an event is held at a Hilton. I have been a longtime Hilton Honors guy and was scored with a stack of Starbucks vouchers, free internet and access to their pd gym. 2 out of 3 is awesome!

Just dawned on me, that the last #sww I attended was in 2001. It was in Orlando and it was one of the first software shows I attended and I was floored. This was back when Jon Hirschtick was CEO and Jon McEleney was COO. Vic Leventhal did a fair amount of the mc-ing. Might seem like I am name dropping. Just trying to put things in perspective, I certainly don’t know any of these guys personally, but they are all figure heads in the SW community. Hirschtick is on twitter now and posted that he will be hosting another tweetup. How things change. All for the good.

Even in the 9 years since I was hear last, I still recognize many of the faces. I remember sitting on the edge of my seat as Aaron Kelley was on stage demoing What’s New in I guess is must have been SW2001. Those moments were defining for me as a software AE, demo jock.. SW defined what it was like to burst on the market and show the world how it was done.

To put things in perspective, here are a few points between then and now.

  • winXP hadn’t been released yet
  • Inventor was only a concept at the time
  • PDMWorks, CosmosWorks, FloWorks, CircuitWorks and a whole slew of others were Gold Partners
  • Hirschtick made a big deal about being on the road to 100k seats (I thought he was out of his mind)
  • The name DS SolidWorks was the furthest thing from anyone’s mind

I’m pleasantly surprised to see the young, badass feeling still is alive and well, so far. Let’s see how I feel after a few more days.

Entering SolidWorks World 2010 (#sww10) with big expectations

Pretty bold statement. But, then again, when you have been riding at the top (SW, that is), we come to expect big things from you. I am sure I won’t be disappointed. Being a Partner of SolidWorks, I come into these events with a totally different perspective than I suspect 99% of the attendees. I am literally coming to absorb, learn and come away with a glimpse of the future. But on the same token, I’m hard to disappoint and thrill at the same time. I take it all in stride, I view all new features as awesome but yet leave wanting so much more.

We work with all of the major MCAD systems, so it is crucial that we understand the workflow, new features and general coolness of each package. This way, when we add new functionality to CFdesign, it looks familiar and even promotes the functionality in the MCAD system.

Some of the things I am looking forward to the most.

  1. Sustainability Hands-on – Definitely a buzzword this year at #au2009 and now at #sww10. Clearly has the momentum. How it will help engineers select materials is awesome, BUT – think of how simulation can fine tune this and take it to the next level. Selecting the proper cooling material for a heat sink, what impact on the world does the fluid you are using have? Suppose you could virtually “swap” materials in a virtual design study?
  2. What’s New in SolidWorks 2011- I’ll be blunt, what I really care most about is how will SW/DS truly leverage the web more. All of the other stuff users will care about- making SW slicker is always cool, but come on people take 3D MCAD to the next level in the cloud. First to acknowledge that I don’t know exactly what that means, but I suspect SW does.

Tonight, is one of a few Blogger/Tweetups that I am really looking forward to. Great to meet up with some old friends as well as put a face to a tweet. Much more to come.

See CFdesign 2011 Preview at SolidWorks World 2010

Informal invitation to all CFdesign users attending SolidWorks World 2010. I will be there Monday and Tuesday and would love to grab 5 mins to chat, say hello, grab a coffee and just frankly learn how we can make CFdesign better.

We have been working really hard on the 2011 release and I think you will like what you see. If you are interested, shoot me an email and we can catch up.

Even if you aren’t able to attend or meet, I’d love to grab a few minutes to listen.

Thanks!!

Derrek

Apple 3D Head Tracking for Manufacturing

Ever thought about bobbing and weaving with your CAD model?  I received this video and post today.  Really cool concept. What do you think?

Touch screen seems to be the hot topic in CAD right now. What do people think about head jestering. Obviously, this video takes it to the extreme. I can’t visualize myself moving my head that much (as shown in the video), but the concept is AWESOME! Got me thinking of the next generation of interacting with 3D models in the CAE space.

Recently noticed that even the local weather folks are using fancy touch screens. Imagine it even bigger than this. Imagine taking this to the next dimension and interacting with a holograph. Check out this video that was posted a few months back.

All exciting stuff.I used to be a big time user of the spaceball. I don’t seem to use it as much today. Nothing wrong with it, just not driving CAD as much as I used to. But, coming from someone who is spinning models around daily and creating presentation after presentation. I am looking for the next generation “model manipulation tool”. I might trademark that name. Just came to me…

Google Voice seems appealing, why bother with Skype?

I have to admit, Google Voice seems really appealing. Web based access to all of my phone “stuff”. Seems like a no-brainer.

I have been a devoted skyper for a few years now. Went through a few bumps in the road and tried Yahoo Messenger for a bit– but came back to skype.

Performance with skype, for the most part, is pretty good. The biggest drawback to skype, for some, is the inability to check voice mail remotely. There are some workarounds, but for the most part, this is not as straight forward as it should be. Personally, I am not on the road a quarter of what I used to be, so its not that big of a deal. Plus, between forwarding calls to my mobile and using the skype iphone app, I’m pretty much covered.

The first hurdle in using Google Voice is a new phone number. I know I sound 100, but that is a major pain in the neck. Sure, I could forward my skype number (which is my main work number), but that would be a hassle. This is trivial compared to the lack of integration with IM. I am sure I could use Google Chat, but I don’t know anyone using that – all of my connections are primarily on skype.

The ability to have IM and phone completely integrated in the same system is crucial for me right now. It is so a part of my process now. Plus, I use file sharing and screen sharing ALL THE TIME now. I rarely use webex unless its a group call and even then, we use skype for the audio.

What can skype do to improve?

  • continue sound quality
  • make voice mail easier
  • offer a web only version, like yahoo
  • ENABLE multi person screen sharing (charge if needed)

So, for the foreseeable future, I’m sticking with skype. Here’s why:

  • Phone, IM, file sharing, screen sharing all in one location
  • Don’t want the hassle of switching numbers.
  • Video calling becoming more and more intriguing w. skype

DEVELOP3D iphone app is killer

Who says print is dead? It just needed an overhaul. The boys at DEVELOP3D are changing the way we all view print media. Their magazine is targeting those of us in the Computer Aided Engineering field. Fancy term for 3D MCAD, FEA, CFD, MFG geeks. Their magazine is written in a modern, no BS format- fun read.

They just announced an iphone app today. Putting their magazine- present, past and future right on my phone. It’s killer. The layout is slick, super slick. Allows me to page through, just as you’d expect. But, also gives me the ability to bookmark and share!! The sharing has so much potential. Allows me to purchase the magazine and when I am done, I can shoot it to a friend for 90 days. I can ask for it back at anytime. If my request is ignored, it will auto release it in 10days. Realizing this is the first pass on this. In the future, total control of sharing period with the ability for me to bookmark and share specific articles even if it sends a web link to the online version would be solid.

What about the future? Knowing these boys, I’m sure they are already thinking of the 2.0 version. I’d like twitter access to post above said links to an article. Reading on my iphone, see an article, I like, tweet it and send the world the link.

This all is exciting stuff with a whole new look on print media. Who says its dead?

Upfront CFD remains a few steps ahead of the rest

I read a blog post yesterday attempting to explain Upfront CFD and then comparing it to traditional CFD and concurrent CFD. Yea, Concurrent CFD was a new one for me too.  A fancy word for “CAD embedded” CFD. It’s been around for a number of years and when you first look at it, sounds great!! A CFD tool that lives and breathes right in my CAD tool. Awesome! Immediately, there is a comfort level that everything will be ok and it can get the job done. For very simple (geometric and physics related) problems, where comparing one design to the other isn’t important,  this can be true. But even for the simple problems, it can come up a little short. Let’s take a look.

The Problem

MCAD tools have been around for awhile, they were built from the ground up to design 3D parts, generate 2D prints and the like. They can be fairly intensive programs with tons of features. Many companies have laid an FEA program on top of this foundation and have been fairly successful. SolidWorks Simulation is super popular for structural simulation. It does a great job for design level simulation. Structural simulation is fairly straight forward these days. Users tend to plot deformation and von mises (others as well) stresses to determine if something passed or failed. Often, you can get away with a simple static image to compare across designs.

In CFD, we tend to look at “pressure drop”, “peak velocity”, “max temperature” etc. We use these values as our pass/fail criteria. But this static data isn’t enough to tell you why one design passed over the other. A static image often just doesn’t cut it. This is where Concurrent CFD begins to break down. The CFD system is laid on top of the heavyweight CAD system, so having the ability and flexibility to compare models quickly and easily in 3D becomes impossible. You are now spitting out images and laying them on your desk, really hard to see what’s going on “inside” the model. This is one of the fundamental differences between CFD and structural FEA. The action of structural FEA happens on the outside (surface of the model). With CFD, the magic, often happens on the inside. In other words, having the ability to slice/dice and COMPARE in 3D is essential.

Often, users find that the honeymoon of CFD living inside their CAD system lasts for a very short time. Many of the CAD embedded programs are developed by 3rd parties which requires them to add functionality on top of the CAD framework. The result is that you have 20+ brand new dialog boxes that are popping up on the screen. So are you really in a familiar environment anymore? I’d argue that all of the familiarity and comfort of flying around in your CAD tool goes out the window. You are often locked down by wizards and forced to follow a specific recipe. This works fantastic day 1 of training, but many of us want to take off the training wheels and do it our way.

The Solution

Upfront CFD isn’t a new term to learn. It’s been around for 18 years. It has been developed from day 1 to address one simple purpose – to empower design engineers to solve fluid flow and thermal design challenges early and throughout the entire design process. Upfront CFD has all of the comforts of your CAD system- mouse operations are the same, layout is native and clean (works exactly the way you expect), CAD materials and attributes are read directly from the native CAD system as well as being fully associative. But the gem of Upfront CFD is the ability to properly do what-if scenarios.

The real impact of Upfront CFD is the ability to conduct multi-scenario design studies in a single environment. The environment is completely associative, you can clone designs or scenarios and update any change made to the CAD model. These clones are extremely lightweight, not simply entire copies of the previous, and give you the flexibility and power to do numerous what-if scenarios. Automation is one of the fundamental concepts of Upfront CFD. The data can be reused intelligently from one scenario to the next with a simple click of a button as well as being reused for future simulations.

multi-scenario design study environment

Once you have your defined results, whether they are critical values such as max temperature or pressure drop or 3D results, you can compare the data side by side instantly. Imagine having 4 designs that you want to see the flow behavior or temperature profile in 3D side by side? Click of a button in Upfront CFD, impossible in Concurrent or Traditional CFD. That’s the difference!

The Disclaimer

Many of you know this, but fair to state that I’m the Product Manager for CFdesign, so this may come across as grand standing. Not my intention. I am just trying to lay out some of the facts and dispel the myths. There is a place in the world for traditional CFD- PhD-type research problems, extremely massive models that require compute farms to crank out and when comparison is not important. This is a fairly niche market, but valid nonetheless. Same goes for Concurrent CFD. The market is even a bit more niche as it caters to very simple problems, that are fairly small in size and complexity and comparison is of little value.

Don’t take my word for it- go out there and check it out. Google it all- the facts are there.

CFdesign 2010 Winter Update is like xmas all over again..

We’ve been working hard fine tuning CFdesign 2010 to fix any issues and adding a few nuggets of goodness. This is the first of 3 scheduled Updates that will be posted quarterly. To grab it, simply click on the Downloads section of the CFdesign Customer Portal.

One of the areas we have spent some time is updating many of our CAD launchers to stay as current as absolutely possible with all of our MCAD partners. We have added support for..

  • SolidWorks 2010
  • Solid Edge ST2
  • UG NX7

We have also added further integrated support for Autodesk Revit Arch and MEP 2010. This is a really exciting area for us lately. Some very cool AEC applications out there and a massive push for greener, more efficient thermal comfort demands. Check out Parker, doing his thing..

We have also been spending alot of time as a company testing out windows 7. We are officially win7 certified. Pretty psyched to see Microsoft continuing to polish and refine. Personally, I have been running Vista for years without issues. It’s way better than archaic XP. This is coming from a die-hard linux fan. But, when it comes to CAE software- driving MCAD and CFdesign all day, win7 is where the party’s at..

Lots of other little goodies are in the Winter Update. You owe it to yourself to stay current, grab it install it and have some fun.

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