The traditional multi-CAD experience
According to Aberdeen group, about 82% of you use multiple CAD tools in order to accommodate customers, suppliers, and other supply chain partners. In fact, Aberdeen found many companies using up to 5 different CAD tools. Software vendors have worked hard to make a more interoperable environment for manufacturers. But the truth is, you can’t find one tool that will allow you to import, modify, and then incorporate your changes back to the original design. That’s because in a traditional parametric environment, you lose design intelligence when you export a model out of its native format. The result is frustration, lost time as teams recreate models from scratch, and, well, a bunch of redundant CAD systems all under one roof.
The traditional multi-tool experience
Many engineers struggle with inflexible specialized tools too. You need your models to work with tools for electromechanical design, digital human modeling, associative tooling, etc. As with incompatible CAD systems, when the specialized tools don’t work together you get lost time, redundant work, redundant tools, and frustration.
The Creo 1.0 experience
With Creo 1.0, you can move designs from one vendor’s system to PTC without having to start over again. You can launch the model in the Creo Direct App and make whatever changes you like without worrying about interdependencies. Behind the scenes, Creo 1.0 is applying your changes using a common data model that works in a parametric or direct environment. That means you can feely move imported models between Creo Direct and Creo Parametric, without ever losing design intelligence.
In fact, you don’t even have to use the direct app if you’re an expert parametric user. Creo 1.0 offers an extension, Creo Flexible Modeling Extension (FMX), that can give you direct-like capabilities in Creo Parametric. So, load any model in Creo Parametric and modify it using FMX, as easily as if you were working with a direct modeler. In addition, Creo offers the broadest range of interoperable design, visualization, and illustration capabilities on the market. Plus, the Creo suite includes a huge range of tools in apps that all work together. You won’t need to use redundant, incompatible tools to get your job done. And, since all the tools and apps are based on the same interface, you won’t have to learn a new tool for every job you perform. Working in a multi-CAD, multi-tool environment is just one process that gets easier when you can switch between parametric and direct modeling. I’ll tell you about several more in the weeks ahead.
According to Aberdeen group, about 82% of you use multiple CAD tools in order to accommodate customers, suppliers, and other supply chain partners. In fact, Aberdeen found many companies using up to 5 different CAD tools. Software vendors have worked hard to make a more interoperable environment for manufacturers. But the truth is, you can’t find one tool that will allow you to import, modify, and then incorporate your changes back to the original design. That’s because in a traditional parametric environment, you lose design intelligence when you export a model out of its native format. The result is frustration, lost time as teams recreate models from scratch, and, well, a bunch of redundant CAD systems all under one roof.
The traditional multi-tool experience
Many engineers struggle with inflexible specialized tools too. You need your models to work with tools for electromechanical design, digital human modeling, associative tooling, etc. As with incompatible CAD systems, when the specialized tools don’t work together you get lost time, redundant work, redundant tools, and frustration.
The Creo 1.0 experience
With Creo 1.0, you can move designs from one vendor’s system to PTC without having to start over again. You can launch the model in the Creo Direct App and make whatever changes you like without worrying about interdependencies. Behind the scenes, Creo 1.0 is applying your changes using a common data model that works in a parametric or direct environment. That means you can feely move imported models between Creo Direct and Creo Parametric, without ever losing design intelligence.
In fact, you don’t even have to use the direct app if you’re an expert parametric user. Creo 1.0 offers an extension, Creo Flexible Modeling Extension (FMX), that can give you direct-like capabilities in Creo Parametric. So, load any model in Creo Parametric and modify it using FMX, as easily as if you were working with a direct modeler. In addition, Creo offers the broadest range of interoperable design, visualization, and illustration capabilities on the market. Plus, the Creo suite includes a huge range of tools in apps that all work together. You won’t need to use redundant, incompatible tools to get your job done. And, since all the tools and apps are based on the same interface, you won’t have to learn a new tool for every job you perform. Working in a multi-CAD, multi-tool environment is just one process that gets easier when you can switch between parametric and direct modeling. I’ll tell you about several more in the weeks ahead.
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