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COFES 2008
April 10-13, 2008
Scottsdale, Arizona
The Scottsdale Plaza Resort
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Joel Spolsky in Inc. magazine - a great article on innovation
Joel Orr By Joel Orr on 2/28/2008
Spolsky is a software entrepreneur in New York. His blog, "Joel on Software," is enormously popular for the wisdom and down-to-earth strength of his writing.

He now writes a monthly piece for "Inc."; this article is on the power of "impossible" ideas. Worth checking out.
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Autodesk World Press Days
Joel Orr By Joel Orr on 2/15/2008
Autodesk held its World Press Days in San Francisco earlier this week. The bottom line: Autodesk is focusing on helping customers integrate all the product lines where it makes sense. The use of REVIT for facilities, integrated with the use of Inventor for the machines that get placed in the facilities, along with Civil 3D for the site - you get the idea.

Running throughout the presentations was the thread of sustainability. Green designs were featured, and environmental impact considered in each case study.

CEO Carl Bass kicked off the event, and was accessible throughout. There is the clear sense that the company is blossoming with an engineer at the helm.

Autodesk's digital prototyping message was prominent, and several speakers went into some depth to explain that this approach to the automation of design is well-thought-out, and is sound both philosophically and organizationally.

The firm now has a Plant divisi ...
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Is SaaS the Killer App for the CAD Industry?
Brian Seitz By Brian Seitz on 2/10/2008 9:00 AM
As the Engineering and the Software industries have changed over time, the priorities of users and vendors have diverged. The old industry model of doing business selling products may be becoming obsolete as a new model of selling service takes on momentum in other software industries. Engineering SaaS maybe the next Killer App in Engineering Software as it will change the fundamental value proposition for businesses. Both Engineering firms and Engineering Software providers should seriously look into this new model of business.
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It's never too late to have a happy childhood
Joel Orr By Joel Orr on 1/27/2008
That's a phrase I heard in the framework of the Hoffman Process - a methodology for finding out things that are keeping you from being who you really are, and taking action to get them out of the way. But that's not with this post is about.

I read recently - it may have been in an ASEE (American Society of Engineering Educators) mailing - that most people have determined whether they will pursue a career in engineering or science by the end of the 8th grade. And the decision hinges on how they feel about math.

I've also read recently that the number of young people choosing engineering, science, and technology professions in the US is declining.

The ability to do math is a filter for getting into good engineering and science schools. On the surface, that seems reasonable: Math is the language of precision, and its abstractive tools provide access to the reasoning of the ages, as well as the ability to carry it o ...
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Book review: "Everything is Miscellaneous"
Joel Orr By Joel Orr on 1/25/2008
When David Weinberger spoke at COFES 2005, his topic was "Everything is Miscellaneous." Now his book of that name is out, and it is fascinating. The implications for the engineering software business are worth thinking about.

Here's an essay Weinberger wrote for Amazon.com called, "The Flocking of Information":

As businesses go miscellaneous, information gets chopped into smaller and smaller pieces. But it also escapes its leash--adding to a pile that can be sorted and arranged by anyone with a Web browser and a Net connection. In fact, information exhibits bird-like "flocking behavior," joining with other information that adds value to it, creating swarms that help customers and, ultimately, the businesses from which the information initially escaped.

For example, Wize.com is a customer review site founded in 2005 by entrepr ...

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Dean Kamen at SolidWorks World: FIRST Robotics needs volunteers
Joel Orr By Joel Orr on 1/23/2008

Kudos to SolidWorks for a program full of fascinating speakers of interest to engineers as engineers, as designers, as people. And none of them plugged SolidWorks.

Today's speaker was Dean Kamen, inventor, entrepreneur, and founder of FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology). Dean's vision: “ …to create a world where science and technology are celebrated….  where young people dream of becoming science and technology heroes….”

The purpose of FIRST is to inspire young people’s interest and participation in science and technology. Based in Manchester, N.H., it designs accessible, innovative programs to build self-confidence, knowledge, and life skills while motivating young people to pursue opportunities in science, technology, engineering, and math.

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Photosynth and CAD
Dick Morley By Dick Morley on 1/16/2008
I got this from my friends at NCMS (Tony Haynes) and tis food for thought
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/129

Take a look at the link above and then consider all of the DoD legacy systems that began life in pre-CAD days but have been enhanced over the years with a multitude of modifications where design data spans the spectrum from 2D drawings on vellum to 3D CAD solid models annotated with PMI information. Is it possible that Photosynth technology can relate all those different types of image data to produce a result that is far richer than anything available today? I think it may well be the “next big thing” in useful application of mixed media data for sustainment.

I sure agree, even though is calls for monster screens and GB of running data. We sure can browse our design and images better than now..

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Gusset Plates
Russ Henke By Russ Henke on 1/15/2008 11:47 AM
Our family is planning a modest addition to our relatively small house in California. We plan to utilize internal steel beams similar to those uniquely used in the existing house, built in 1995. We believe the steel cage created by these beams adds seismic stability. However, during the recent planning for the addition, we discovered that the building code in our city has changed since 1995. The steel gussets used where multiple beams are joined must now be designed per a newly adopted code with far stricter strength standards than before.

We are gratified that the building code now has these stricter requirements, even though the CAD software used to design the original steel gussets in 1995 is identical to the CAD software used now.

Because the design of our modest steel cage is no better than the skill and up-to-date code knowledge of the engineer/architect using the CAD software. It has always been thus – CAD software, old or new, is no substitute for the exp ...
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Getting Work Done in Virtual Worlds
Russ Henke By Russ Henke on 1/12/2008 11:41 AM
“Forrester Research is predicting in its “Getting Work Done in Virtual Worlds” report that in five years 3-D Internet will be as important as the Web now is to businesses,” according to SandHill.com. The "Getting Work Done in Virtual Worlds" report released by Forrester during the first week of January 2008 concludes that executives should begin investigating and experimenting with virtual worlds soon because of their promise for remote collaboration, training and the ability to build and share 3-D models.

The virtual model is especially important for professionals like surgeons, architects, engineers and product designers, who use CAD models or visualization systems to explore or create projects, Forrester said. In virtual meetings, these professionals can import models for discussion and modification, according to the report. "You can release near-final designs to a limited group of external users and solicit feedback before starting fabrication," it said.
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Wikinomics: Worth reading
Joel Orr By Joel Orr on 1/10/2008
When Don Tapscott's "Wikinomics" came out over a year ago, I was turned off by the title, so I never picked it up. A couple of days ago, I went to hear Tapscott give a breakfast talk at Stanford. It was very worthwhile. (It is co-authored by Tapscott's colleague, Anthony Williams.)

The book was Amazon.com's top-selling business book of 2007. Its subtitle is "How mass collaboration changes everything" - and it is accurate, if not inspiring.

Unfortunately, the book has none of Tapscott's excellent charts and graphics, showing the dramatic changes wrought by mass collaboration; you have to get it from the words. But it is good, readable business prose, full of case studies and meaty stuff.

He based it on a $9 million research project; this is not a rehashed web sweep.

And the book goes on: At www.wikinomics.com, you can participate in creating the "next chapter" and read an excerpt from the book. There is al ...
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