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PTC Lightning: Prelude to PTC Creo 1.0详细图文介绍!!!

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发表于 2010-10-29 16:33:43 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式

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Introducing Creo, PTC's new brand that will eventually replace the company 's current brands: Pro/E, CoCreate, and ProductView


Creo 1.0 is expected to debut in mid-2011.

It’s a clear blue day in Boston, with a few precipitation in the air. At the Park Plaza Castle, a 14,000 sq. ft. exhibit hall in the heart of Boston, the forecast calls for lightning, with lots of anticipation. For the past several months, PTC has been in a stealth mode, giving away teasers about its Project Lightning but keeping its details under wrap. Today at 10 AM Eastern Time, Lightning strikes, in a manner of speaking.
PTC Lightning brings in a season of change, beginning with a significant reshuffling of the company’s major brands. On the way out are three household names: Pro/ENGINEER, CoCreate, and ProductView. They’re to be replaced by Creo Elements/Pro, Creo Elements/Direct, and Creo Elements/View.
Creo represents “PTC’s vision for the next 20 years of mechanical design,” said Brian Shepherd, PTC’s executive VP of product develOPMent. Instead of a single software platform, Creo is “a suite of interoperable, role-specific applications designed from the groundup to be an open system,” he added.
PTC Creo, Marked for Mid-2011
The first phase of PTC Lightning is a simple renaming of its products, effective immediately. This is to be followed by the release of Creo 1.0, scheduled for the middle of 2011, closely followed by Creo 2.0. This new “clean-architecture product,” said Shepherd, “is the one that will solve all the unsolved problems [in product development].”
The unsolved problems, as listed by PTC’ new CEO Jim Heppelmann (he officially took over from Richard Harrison this month), are usability, interoperability, and large assembly management. (For more, read “PTC User World Event” report, June 8, 2010.)
Creo is not an all-encompassing “big, gigantic, monolithic product,” Shepherd said. It’s to serve as a platform, upon which user can add on AnyRole apps (apps suitable for individual roles). “We really like this Apple analogy — there’s an app for that,” he explained.
AnyRole, AnyMode, AnyData, AnyBOM
Neither PTC’s parametric powerhouse Pro/E nor its direct modeler CoCreate will serve as the native format for Creo. Creo will use a new patent-pending data model as its native format, allowing parametric and direct geometry to be exchanged. Creo will allow what PTC calls AnyMode modeling, to accommodate both parametric and direct modeling methods. Creo is expected to support both Pro/E and CoCreate models as customers gradually migrate to the new apps.
The user interface for Creo will look like neither Pro/E nor CoCreate, explained Shepherd. In fact, Creo’s interface may look different from user to user, based on the role he or she has chosen. Accordingly, available Creo apps will vary in price, ranging from premium pricing to free, based on its complexity or simplicity. Available apps will include dedicated 2D modeling, subdivision modeling, rendering, numeric controlled machining, simulation, visualization and markup, among others.
Whereas Pro/E’s emphasis, as with any parametric modeler, is on the recipe for the model (the historical steps required to generate the model), Creo’s emphasis is on geometry. Parametric or feature-based modeling will still be available, but it’ll be a means to an end, not the primary focus of the software. The demonstration shows Creo Elements/Pro users and Creo Elements/Direct users easily exchanging and modifying models created in each other’s programs.
One area that PTC felt has always been neglected is assembly management, or (to be more precise) configuration management. With Creo, you’ll be able to record, chart out, and manage different product configurations in a flowchart-like interface. PTC also plans to let Creo users interact with different geometry created in other programs by converting them to a Creo-adoptable format.
App Developers Wanted
To foster a large Creo ecosystem, PTC plans to offer its development partners access to Creo’s common data model and app templates, allowing them to develop and offer Creo-like apps targeted at specific industries and markets beyond PTC’s core expertise. It’s not yet clear how PTC plans to distribute these applications or how much they’ll be licensed for.
With Creo’s approach, Heppelmann is confident, “We will not lose an ease-of-use battle for some time now … Power users get power; casual users get simplicity.”
PTC’s Creo product suite is a major shakeup for the company itself. For the past two deCADes, PTC has been a fervent champion of parametric modeling, or history-based modeling. The company is, in fact, credited with being a parametric pioneer. But its acquisition of CoCreate, a direct modeling CAD software, opened its eyes to new possibilities, admitted Heppelmann.
The smaller Apple-style apps are expected to appeal to a new generation of software users who come to rely on iPhone and iPad as their primary communication and collaboration devices. The  breakup of a parametric program into smaller apps may also reduce the learning curve, one of the major barriers for 3D CAD adoption.
As newcomers like Spaceclaim grabs market share, as established vendors like Autodesk and Siemens PLM begin nurturing their own direct modeling products, traditional history-based modelers like Pro/E face immense pressure to evolve. For PTC, a company deeply rooted in parametric modeling with 25,000 customers, shifting gear is no easy task. So there’s a lot riding on Creo. But there’s also a lot to gain, since Creo could put PTC on the radar of many small and mid-size businesses that view Pro/E as an overly complex solution to relatively straightforward design problems.
PTC’s dedicated site: https://creo/ptc.com.
Managing editor Jamie Gooch’s report on the launch event: PTC Reveals Project Lightning as Creo

Creo app window for simulation and analysis.


Creo app window for rendering.


Creo in NC mode (left) and subdivision modeling mode (right).

补图一张:



本帖最后由 flywee 于 2010-10-29 16:41 编辑
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2
发表于 2010-10-29 16:37:51 | 只看该作者
好像就是PROE6.0。。。
3
发表于 2010-10-29 23:02:01 | 只看该作者
看好细分建模,类似烤鸭IMA,就差油鸡木有类似功能了
4
发表于 2010-10-30 00:09:27 | 只看该作者
感觉ptc终于有点创新的产品了,希望能再续proe的辉煌!
5
发表于 2010-10-30 09:07:56 | 只看该作者
wyf0710 发表于 2010-10-29 23:02
看好细分建模,类似烤鸭IMA,就差油鸡木有类似功能了
软件下来以后就知道有没有啦
6
发表于 2010-10-30 10:02:41 | 只看该作者
wyf0710 发表于 2010-10-29 23:02
看好细分建模,类似烤鸭IMA,就差油鸡木有类似功能了

通篇都没看到什么细分建模呀?
话说那是3DSMAX做人物的东东呀,用在工程工业软件上有多大意义?
7
发表于 2010-10-30 10:16:14 | 只看该作者
可以去看看ptc的网上直播,其中确实有类似catia的ima功能,演示的是做汽车方向盘的塑料包覆件,估计现在也只是具备雏形,确实比较吸引眼球,有多大意义倒不好说,或者是以后的一个方向也说不定,呵呵!
8
发表于 2010-10-30 10:52:05 | 只看该作者
好漂亮。
LS,IMA是什么呀,能提供连接吗,PTC和CATIA的IMA是怎样的呢,能有连接吗?
9
发表于 2010-10-30 11:09:07 | 只看该作者
没找到,倒找到了一个什么造潜艇的软件。貌似很强大。PTC为什么不把它给集成进来呢??

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10
发表于 2010-10-30 11:11:33 | 只看该作者
constantinople 发表于 2010-10-30 11:09
没找到,倒找到了一个什么造潜艇的软件。貌似很强大。PTC为什么不把它给集成进来呢??1044795


PTC收购的,叫做CADDS。不可能的,集成一个OSD就够他们头大了
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