Cadalyst - April 2008 - (Page 6) editor’swindow Customization and Innovation It’s not about using digital technologies to eliminate physical prototypes; it’s about adopting strategies that combine the best of both worlds to meet manufacturing challenges. A recent study released by The Aberdeen Group underscores what many in the productdevelopment field already know: Top manufacturers use innovation for more than just determining which products to offer. They also employ creative thinking when it comes to building the actual processes they use to conceptualize, design, and manufacture those products, which lets them bring their offerings to market faster than many of their competitors. The report, titled Complementary Digital and Physical Prototyping Strategies: Avoiding the Product Development Crunch, states that manufacturers who customize their productdevelopment process — using a variety of the latest rendering, simulation, and rapid prototyping technologies in a way that meets their particular requirements and challenges — generally succeed in meeting shortened development schedules. Aberdeen released the study in February and is making it accessible to registered site users at www.aberdeen. com/summary/report/benchmark/4642-RA-digitalprototyping-development.asp. What do these results mean to the manufacturing community at large? According to Chad Jackson, research director of global product innovation and engineering at Aberdeen, it means that best-in-class manufacturers aren’t letting the segregated offerings of today’s vendors stop them from optimizing their development processes and adopting a customized blend of a range of solutions. “Customers are applying digital and physical prototyping technologies to their own end,” Jackson said. “If you look at the market today, no one solution provider is talking about that message. The real answer here is some combination of complementary approaches. Customers are having to figure it out on their own how these technologies play together.” In other words, it’s not the vendors who are creating the multifunctional, hybrid solutions to meet manufacturers’ needs; it’s the manufacturers themselves who are pioneering the development of unique solutions that help them excel in the competitive marketplace. Given the myriad technologies through which manufacturers must wade to find which tools might benefit their efforts, that’s an impressive feat. The Aberdeen report also states that advanced rapid prototyping technologies are playing a key role in the effort to innovate product-development processes. Best-in-class performers are using 3D printing in all phases of the development cycle to verify digitaldesign and testing results and assess a product’s form, fit, and function. On a side note, be on the lookout for the May issue of Cadalyst, in which we will publish a special section on reverse engineering that will explore current advancements in 3D scanning technology and provide suggestions for manufacturers looking to implement these tools into their processes. Are you one of those manufacturers who have succeeded in creating a customized approach to product development, one that melds the benefits of digital prototyping with that of physical? If so, drop Cadalyst a line to let us know about your achievements. Amy Stankiewicz Editor-In-Chief, Cadalyst amy.stankiewicz@cadalyst.com 6 www.cadalyst.com cadalyst April 2008 http://www.aberdeen.com/summary/report/benchmark/4642-RA-digital-prototyping-development.asp http://www.aberdeen.com/summary/report/benchmark/4642-RA-digital-prototyping-development.asp http://www.cadalyst.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Cadalyst - April 2008 Cadalyst - April 2008 Contents Editor's Window Cad Central The Summer of BIM Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors Caligari trueSpace 7.5 — 3D Modeling Software HP Compaq 8710w — Mobile Workstation Autodesk Design Review 2009 — Design Viewing and Collaboration Software Getting Better — What Should You Learn? Technical Uses for Nontechnical Software AEC on Macs Cad Cartoon Issue Indexes Tips Rain Down on Harry Cadalyst - April 2008 Cadalyst - April 2008 - Cadalyst - April 2008 (Page Cover1) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Cadalyst - April 2008 (Page Cover2) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 6) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 7) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 8) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Editor's Window (Page 9) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Cad Central (Page 10) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Cad Central (Page 11) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Cad Central (Page 12) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Cad Central (Page 13) Cadalyst - April 2008 - The Summer of BIM (Page 14) Cadalyst - April 2008 - The Summer of BIM (Page 15) Cadalyst - April 2008 - The Summer of BIM (Page 16) Cadalyst - April 2008 - The Summer of BIM (Page 17) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 18) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 19) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 20) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 21) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 22) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 23) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 24) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Thin Is In — Large LCD Monitors (Page 25) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Caligari trueSpace 7.5 — 3D Modeling Software (Page 26) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Caligari trueSpace 7.5 — 3D Modeling Software (Page 27) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Caligari trueSpace 7.5 — 3D Modeling Software (Page 28) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Caligari trueSpace 7.5 — 3D Modeling Software (Page 29) Cadalyst - April 2008 - HP Compaq 8710w — Mobile Workstation (Page 30) Cadalyst - April 2008 - HP Compaq 8710w — Mobile Workstation (Page 31) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Autodesk Design Review 2009 — Design Viewing and Collaboration Software (Page 32) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Autodesk Design Review 2009 — Design Viewing and Collaboration Software (Page 33) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Getting Better — What Should You Learn? (Page 34) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Getting Better — What Should You Learn? (Page 35) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Getting Better — What Should You Learn? (Page 36) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Getting Better — What Should You Learn? (Page 37) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Technical Uses for Nontechnical Software (Page 38) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Technical Uses for Nontechnical Software (Page 39) Cadalyst - April 2008 - AEC on Macs (Page 40) Cadalyst - April 2008 - AEC on Macs (Page 41) Cadalyst - April 2008 - AEC on Macs (Page 42) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Issue Indexes (Page 43) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Issue Indexes (Page 44) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Issue Indexes (Page 45) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Tips Rain Down on Harry (Page 46) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Tips Rain Down on Harry (Page Cover3) Cadalyst - April 2008 - Tips Rain Down on Harry (Page Cover4)
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