Dutch website Inventor Wizard have created appearance libraries for Inventor containing all of the European RAL standard colours. There are 3 flavours on offer: generic, metallic highgloss, and metallic matte.
The site is in Dutch but can be automatically translated by Google. The colour names shown in the appearance browser are also in Dutch, but we have converted these to English if you prefer to understand exactly which colour you are choosing when you select a RAL code. The converted appearance library is available here (1.8mb zip)
To use:
Place the adsklib file with your Design Data, then add it to your project file's Appearance path if you wish to use it in it's entirety as a separate library.
If you would like to add some or all of the colours to an existing library, open it in your Appearance Browser then right click and Add To > your library on each colour you want to use.
SC
6 Jan 2014
24 Dec 2013
Christmas Modelling Challenge
Christmas Modelling Challenge
Once in a while you get asked to model an object in 3D which
at first appears easy but then proves to be problematic. Then on the flip side
you get an object that at first appears very complex and transpires to be far
simpler to model than you initially thought.
I will leave you to decide which category this next shape
falls into but your Christmas challenge is to model the following:
17 Dec 2013
Microsoft offering around 150 free e-books
If you have a hankering to learn SQL Server, Visual Studio, SharePoint Server, Office, Windows, or virtually anything that Microsoft develop then Eric Ligman, Microsoft's Sales Excellence Manager has a treat for you on his blog.
For the princely sum of zero pounds and zero pence, there are 145 (I counted them) individual files available for download in a variety of formats to cater to your preferred method of media consumption.
If you were looking for something to occupy your time while eagerly awaiting an appearance from Santa this Christmas, I think Microsoft have you covered.
Scroll down his blog for the full list.
For the princely sum of zero pounds and zero pence, there are 145 (I counted them) individual files available for download in a variety of formats to cater to your preferred method of media consumption.
If you were looking for something to occupy your time while eagerly awaiting an appearance from Santa this Christmas, I think Microsoft have you covered.
Scroll down his blog for the full list.
13 Dec 2013
Nvidia Maximus - for all your rendering and simulation needs
Another month, another graphics card solution from nvidia. If you are embracing simulation analysis in your design workflows but are spending far too much time waiting for your solutions to finish and release your system back into a usable state, nvdia have an answer.
This time they've brought out technology that should catch the eye of most designers and engineers in the field - a single-system solution for combining rendering capability with simulation analysis in the form of a dual card set-up known as NVIDIA Maximus.
Making use of an nvidia Tesla card to take the brunt of the computational work in your system, you're free carry on your design work with the additional power of the Quadro card. Exploring further design ideas while your first iteration is being solved in the background is an extremely productive way to work, and may help alleviate your growing addiction to coffee breaks.
The hardware is backwards compatible with existing machines and the official marketing page (linked above) provides system designers with enough information on how to implement this technology. It may be an idea to use it in conjunction with something a little more beefy than a Celeron.
As yet we don't have specific performance graphs of Autodesk software, but as soon as I can convince one of the Micro Concepts shareholders to buy me a package for the office, I'll get my excel spreadsheet out and start number crunching with the Tesla, and posting pictures with the Quadro.
SC
12 Dec 2013
The Wolfram Language - trivialising programming languages
Wolfram Alpha is a search engine that offers up results based on calculations and general knowledge. It can handle any complex mathematics that you throw at it and can give you a variety of answers when your query is ambiguous. The programming behind it is impressive, and it's the evolution of that code that has led it's creator, British scientist Stephen Wolfram, to announce what he claims will be a new unified language of programming and computation in the form of the Wolfram Language.
His ambition is for this language to be integrated across all forms of computing so that the massive web of algorithms contained within may handle everything that humans require as output: " laying out graphs or doing image processing or creating user interfaces".
He aims to reduce the knowledge required for programming to simply being able to understand a native language. By using natural expressions and syntax, the automation of tasks and creation of content would become trivial, and the entire world of programming would open up to anyone with access to a computer.
It's quite a bold claim that critics of his controversial book A New Kind of Science may be quick to denounce. But if successful, it will change everything we do with computers and consequently our way of life.
You can read his entire announcement on their company blog.
SC
10 Dec 2013
Augmented Reality technology round-up
Augmented Reality is the term for overlaying computer generated imagery with the real world, accomplished by projecting graphics on to a real-world view. The technology exists on phones and tablets already, but the real goal is have it projected into your field of view. Fighter pilots have been using bespoke AR for decades but as of yet the consumer market hasn't been gifted with such technology although that is set to change.
The technology garnering the most attention of late has been Google Glass, and the company have just announced the option to buy a development kit of the for a mere $1500. This is seen by many as the first giant leap for consumers into the world of augmented reality, but Google themselves have stressed that this is mainly a piece of hardware for recording the world as you see it, mixed with notifications and google search functionality. Their website shows the premise of navigation and language conversion but without stereoscopic vision and a lack of graphical power, the results may never reach the quality that you see simulated in computer games and movies.
However, there are other devices on the horizon which promise to accelerate us into this new era of visual communication I'll have a look at some of these concepts below.
On paper these appear to be the most promising. The possibilities addressed in their concept video are mind-blowing although you may not want to wear them outside of the house. Not only do they project 3D images on to the inside of the glass, there is a built-in 3D Kinect-like sensor to determine close vicinty positions which means you can actually interact with the real-world and virtual-worlds as opposed to only receiving information. If the technology can do half of what is shown - playing virtual chess with a friend, facial recognition of business associates, and instant transition from 3D modelling to 3D printing - then they are worth a purchase at less than half the price of Google Glass.
This product is a little more niche, and uses completely different technology to achieve the augmented effect. They are being developed for virtual table-top gaming (the kind you see beardies playing in the Games Workshop stores in town). Instead of projecting images on to the inside of the lens, they project information to a reflective screen which is then picked up by the glasses to provide high definition images. This definitely limits their application, and unless 3rd party developers decide to expand the functionality then these may not become as mainstream as other offerings.
The company developing these, Vuzix, have already released a virtual reality version (1200VR) so have experience in designing hi-tech glasses for the consumer market. It's not clear how much support these have for consumer or industrial markets, but their striking design should leave it clear to on-lookers that you're not sporting them for the sake of fashion.
If looking trendy is more important than experiencing the most cutting-edge technology, then these are possibly for you. Very similar to Google Glass but the projector and lens has been designed to blend in better with their frame. Function hasn't entirely been sacrificed in favour of form and the company lists services that are at least on a par with the offerings from Google Glass. How they fare in the long-run against Google and their apparently limitless research budget remains to be seen.
Nissan3E
Not much information on these as of yet but they look quite striking. More details were apparently revealed at November's Tokyo Motor Show but little has surfaced. Either way, these are no doubt designed with driving in mind, so we they may offer navigation potential.
SC
Not much information on these as of yet but they look quite striking. More details were apparently revealed at November's Tokyo Motor Show but little has surfaced. Either way, these are no doubt designed with driving in mind, so we they may offer navigation potential.
SC
6 Dec 2013
Factory Design Utilities Service Pack 1
There is an update available for Factory Design Suite 2014's Utilities over on the Autodesk website right now clocking in at a modest 33MB. Please note that you must install SP1 for Navisworks before installing the utilities service pack.
Autodesk_Factory_Design_Utilities_2014_Service_Pack_1.zip(zip - 32927Kb)

4 Dec 2013
Simulation CFD 2014 Service Pack 2
This one has been available since September, but is worth highlighting for those new to the software.
"A service pack (SP2) has been released for Autodesk Simulation CFD 2014. This marks the second update available to Simulation CFD 2014 and can be applied without SP1 being install on your computer. In this service pack various defects were resolved. In this solution article you will find more information covering the highlights of the service pack, the patch file, and links to the release notes."
32-Bit Installer (.msp ~55 MB)
64-Bit Installer (.msp ~63 MB)
Highlights of Issues Addressed in this Service Pack:
"A service pack (SP2) has been released for Autodesk Simulation CFD 2014. This marks the second update available to Simulation CFD 2014 and can be applied without SP1 being install on your computer. In this service pack various defects were resolved. In this solution article you will find more information covering the highlights of the service pack, the patch file, and links to the release notes."
32-Bit Installer (.msp ~55 MB)
64-Bit Installer (.msp ~63 MB)
As always, follow the Release Notes before upgrading.
- The Thermal Comfort topic in the Help documentation was clarified to indicate that running radiation as a “0-iteration” analysis after the simulation is complete can improve accuracy in some cases.
- The Simulation CFD launch command does not appear in the SolidWorks 2013 user interface.
- The transient harmonic boundary condition does not produce the correct results distribution on the applied surface.
- The UGNX CAD Connection license is not being checked out correctly when launching from UGNX into Simulation CFD.
- The average temperature reported on a Summary Part in the Decision Center is incorrect and different from the value reported in the Parts dialog box and in the Component Thermal Summary (CTS) file.
- Absolute Pressure is displayed incorrectly when solid parts are included within the simulation.
- The Help documentation contains an incorrect description of the path needed to manually configure the Simulation CFD launcher in UGNX.
- A simulation that contains periodic boundary conditions exits unexpectedly and fails to complete.
- Simulations that contain distributed resistance surface parts and are run with an analysis length unit other than meters do not predict the correct operating pressure for the fan
- Locally installed Help documentation does not load on XP.
- When opening a Simulation CFD 2013 Design Study file that was created on a non-English OS into Simulation CFD 2014, the localized string for “CAD Volume” appears as garbled text.
- A particular Design Study causes Simulation CFD 2014 to crash when the simulation is opened after having finished running.
- In a design study containing multiple scenarios, right click on a non-active scenario, enable Adaptation and set the Solver Computer to Local. A crash occurs when activating this scenario after the simulation is complete.
- Simulation CFD crashes if no solver computer is selected prior to clicking Solve to start the simulation.
- The indicated progress percentage is incorrect for a transient simulation that includes multiple inner iterations per time step. The indicated progress percentage can surpass 100%.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)