You’d have to squeeze your eye muscles but think about it…
Adobe announced their latest AI-driven software. This is the software revealed earlier this year too Ooo’s and Ahh’s at Adobe MAX as Project Gemini. Now, Adobe Fresco…
It’s all 2D, and while we’re seeing generative design take off in product dev apps, their approach to material interaction, medium mimicry and real-world outcome (end-product) seems to me to be somewhat unique.
Even more, I think it interesting to see how this could affect the way 3D software developers think about design software. Or, how Adobe considers the applications of this for 3D?
Additive Flow has unveiled a new generative design tool for additive manufacturing that has the unique ability to handle solutions for materials and mechanical design simultaneously.
What looked like twigs proved to be generatively-designed shapes, the output of generative design algorithms available in Autodesk’s Fusion 360, then cast in metal.
Trinckle has developed a powerful new system, Paramate, that can automatically generate custom 3D models to vastly simplify the process of producing unique low volume parts for production.
It wasn’t too long ago when the concept of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and the capabilities of generative design seemed like some far off sci-fi future.
Share this post:
By SolidSmack.com
This is a very small behemoth of an online community about 3D CAD, technology, design, robots, ninjas… Ok, maybe not ninjas so much, but those guys are COOL so there just might be something about some dang ninjas. Besides the occasional blast of intensely cool product design and technology, we look at what’s going on in the world of 3D, add a splash of business insight and web tech into the mix and there ya got your SolidSmack.
A manufacturing-as-a-service company has developed a way to 3D print continuous carbon fiber in a production setting.