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Saturday, 28 December 2013

New CAD standards with Creo

 SOURCE : http://tinyurl.com/p8bgzoe


The computer aided design (CAD) software market has been in somewhat of a technology slump in recent years, with the early innovations of the 1990s tailing off to leave a series of unresolved problems in their wake. Companies using CAD technologies have long been troubled with the same old problems, which they have been by and large putting up with. But this wasn’t good enough for PTC; the company saw these problems as an opportunity to showcase its innovative product development capabilities. That is why, on 28 October 2010, PTC unveiled its new Creo product family of CAD software, which was first introduced as Project Lightning back in June at the PTC/USER World Event. Karen McCandless talks to Michael Campbell, divisional vice president of design and visualisation products at PTC, to find out more.

What led you to launch this new family of products?


The CAD market is pretty large, it’s worth about US$3-4 billion, but it’s largely flat. That might lead some to think that the market is mature and there is nothing left to be done. But we at PTC took a closer look and realised that users are facing some fundamental problems that have not yet been resolved. This includes problems around usability (in the past users have just accepted that CAD is hard to use) and also around interoperability and moving data between different CAD systems. We were also seeing challenges to do with more sophisticated assembly management activities. In today’s world, customers are trying to tailor their products more and more; everyone wants a personalised product, whether it’s for a customer or a market. We developed the Creo family of design apps to really address these problems and make things easier for the user.


What do you think is the most important feature in Creo?
I think that would have to be AnyRole Apps. The idea behind this technology is that instead of providing a big, monolithic product that does all kinds of things, we wanted to provide more specific, tailored applications – this means smaller design applications that are optimised for specific tasks. People find CAD hard to use because the programs are packed with all kinds of functionality; all kinds of different tools are bundled together, which can be really overwhelming for many users. As an analogy, its like if you were going to plant a tree in your back garden. The right tool for the job would probably be a shovel, but CAD vendors would turn up with an excavator. It has all kinds of power and sophistication but it’s too much for the job. So the idea is to give all the different people involved in product development, whether it be the project manager, the mechanical engineers or someone in marketing, the rights apps to access the data and get their job done. This is something that is really unique to our solution.


What else makes Creo stand out in the market?
One of the other things Creo can deliver is more flexibility in terms of user approach to CAD. There are different paradigms in CAD programs: there is a 2D approach, a 3D direct modelling approach and advanced 3D parametric. Creo supports all of those approaches and makes sure they all work well together. The thing that is new, innovative and a differentiator is the ability to use these different paradigms and have them all work well together.


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