Posted by Jason on November 26, 2008
Yesterday I took the show on the road and had an absolute GREAT day! I left cold West Michigan around 7:45 am and started my trek to Evanston, Illinois which is just north of Chicago. After an uneventful travel I arrived in warmer (not warm but warmer than West Michigan) around 10:45 am West Michigan time which is 9:45 am Chicago time.
I spent the day meeting and training with Matthew Cummins from TactonWorks. For those of you who are not familiar with TactonWorks, it is a Certified SolidWorks Gold Partner design automation software that includes its own solver engine. This solver engine is what sets it apart from the majority of the other design automation add-ins that SolidWorks has partnered with. Our company has purchased TactonWorks and I am currently in the process of setting it up to work with our products and design techniques. I am having a lot of fun with it and I am hoping to follow my implementation of TactonWorks right here at RockSolid Perspective. If you are at all interested in finding out more about the software check out their web site here or drop me a comment or email and I will get you in contact with Matthew Cummins.
After a great day of training Matthew and we headed out to the Chicago SolidWorks User Group (CSUG) meeting which was held at the Des Plaines campus of Oakton Community College. This was my first time attending a CSUG meeting and Denny Bahl was a gracious host. Denny and Steven Slowik did a great job of putting this meeting together. It was attended by roughly 30-35 users and they were all treated to a great presentation by Rick Chin (SolidWorks Corporation) on the history and abilities of FeatureXpert. He did a tremendous job of tying in a multitude of ideas that all led to the realization and development of FeatureXpert. Along with meeting Rick for the first time I also had the pleasure of meeting Ed Eaton for the first time in person. It was great to finally introduce myself and get to talk to Ed. All in all this meeting was great; it was well run, well attended and included some great discussions and networking. Denny is doing a tremendous job with this group and I highly encourage you if you are within a reasonable driving distance of Chicago to attend the next meeting that the CSUG offers. You can check out their schedule on their website here.
After the user group meeting I headed back to West Michigan arriving home around 1:00 am. It was well worth my travels and I hope to make that trip again sometime in the hopefully not too distant future. Thanks to everyone who made this day worth the trip to Chicago.
Posted in SolidWorks Partners, User Group Meetings | 1 Comment »
Posted by Jason on May 21, 2008
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Posted by Jason on May 6, 2008
Part 1: Laying the Groundwork
Chapter 1: Understanding Basic Concepts
Here I am, posting my 1st official “book review” on Matt Lombard’s SolidWorks Surfacing and Complex Shape Modeling Bible and I am already late on my goal of 1 chapter a week that I set for myself in my post a couple of weeks ago titled The Day I Have Been Waiting For! I guess enough wasting time and lets get started:
The first section in the book is titled Understanding Basic Concepts. This 1st chapter gives a great idea of what is expected of the readers before they even get too deep into the book. This was great for myself to know right away what I could expect later on in the book and to find out what was expected of me. Lucky enough for me I own Matt’s other book SolidWorks 2007 Bible which I think will be a huge asset if I am struggling with a particular area that he is talking about.
I personally feel that this book is going to be a great learning tool and reference source for me later on. Currently I do not have a deep knowledge of the surfacing area inside of SolidWorks but I want to learn and I feel that this is will be a wonderful resource for me. If you are in a similar situation that I am do not get scared off from purchasing this book. I believe that anyone that has a desire to learn the software will be able to with the way that Matt writes. In closing I am really looking forward to the rest of this book and I look forward to letting you know as I go through it what I am learning and what the book as to offer so stay tuned! Hopefully the next review of the book won’t be as far off on timing as this one!
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Posted by Jason on March 26, 2008
If you haven’t already heard, SolidWorks today announced that the have purchased Priware. Priware’s chief product was the popular SolidWorks add on CircuitWorks. Starting with SolidWorks 2008 sp4.0 CircuitWorks will now be included in the Premium package of the SolidWorks software. If you can’t wait until the next release to get this product you can go to the Downloads and Updates page and get CircuitWorks sp3.0 right now.

If you want to view the press release you can view it here: SolidWorks acquires CircuitWorks provider Priware
If you are already a CircuitWorks customer or reseller click here for information about how this will affect you.
Devon Sowell and Ricky Jordan have also already posted about this so be sure to check out their sites also. And Richard Doyle seems extremely excited about this also so check out what he has to say about it.
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Posted by Jason on January 17, 2008
I recently had the chance to view a demo of an unbelievably powerful program called TactonWorks and was completely blown out of the water by what it capable of doing. TactonWorks is a Design Automation/Knowledge Based Engineering program produced by Tacton Systems AB. There was some big news that came out of the TactonWorks stable this week in a press release that announced that it had officially become a Certified Gold Partner. To view the official press release follow this link: Tacton Becomes Certified Gold Partner. All I can say is that you HAVE to check this program out because it is awesome! You can watch online demos of the software if you follow this link and click on the links on the right of the page.

A quick snippet of a sample program that I viewed was a sudoku puzzle where you could input what ever numbers that you were given and it would within seconds complete the rest of the puzzle, and all of this is done within your SolidWorks model. It was unbelievably quick and accurate. So once again all I can say is that you have to check it out for yourself.
If you are heading to SolidWorks World next week make sure you stop by their booth(#315) and ask for a demo. From what I understand there will be more than enough willing people at the booth that will be happy to show you the power of the software. Watching this demo WILL make your SolidWorks World complete!
If you are not attending SolidWorks World next week and would like to contact a reseller to set up a demo, drop me an email and I will be more than happy to get you the contact information of the reseller I have been talking to.
Posted in SolidWorks Partners | 2 Comments »
Posted by Jason on November 11, 2007
Over the past couple of weeks I have done a lot of thinking about how to set up templates for commonly used designs to speed up design time. In the industry that we are in (deep drawn metal stamping) almost all of our jobs have multiple stations that lead to producing the final product. In most cases the majority of these stations are common designs that may only be different by a few dimensions. So with these facts in front of me and multiple due dates all piled on top of each other has forced me to begin thinking about how to speed up my design time so that I can hit ALL of these due dates without a problem. Around a year ago I began to dabble with a product call DriveWorks which is a design automation program that runs inside of SolidWorks. Now at the time I messed around with it the price tag scared our company off having just spent the money to switch to SolidWorks and CamWorks. But here is the kicker, in SolidWorks 2008 SolidWorks has partnered with DriveWorks to incorporate a program called DriveWorksXpress included in the software. Now it just means that I have to find the time to play around with it more and set it up to benefit our company, I do believe this is a breakout session at SolidWorks World that I will have to attend.
If you want more information about this product you need to check out Jeff Mirisola’s Blog because he has just sat through a 3 day training event on DriveWorks.
Posted in SolidWorks Partners | 4 Comments »