San Antonio is the place to be in January for SolidWorks World. Registration just opened. Early registration can save you $200. Still time to submit for papers too.
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Jeff Sweeney |
San Antonio is the place to be in January for SolidWorks World. Registration just opened. Early registration can save you $200. Still time to submit for papers too.
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Jeff Sweeney |
This year, SolidWorks World sessions were divided into one of the following tracks: CAD Administration, Customer Success/Designing Better Products, Data Management, Design Automation, Design Communication, Design Validation, Education, Modeling Essentials & Productivity Tools.
I decided to do something different, I followed the Data Management track for all of the sessions I attended. I am glad I did, there were some great sessions given by top notch presenters: Jerry Winters, Dan Burmenko, Joy Garon, Randy Simmons, Jeff Sweeney, … [though my name got left off of the program...what's up with that?! That's the real question we should be asking Kerri Dunne.]
Here is what I thought was interesting. The session Randy and I gave had 40 attendees – which was the most attended session I saw. One session had six attendees, the average was twenty. Where was everyone? Attendance was announced at 5,000, there were 20 sessions per time slot, taking into account people playing hookie or spending time in the Partner Pavilion, you’d still expect a hundred or so in these sessions wouldn’t you?
I learned several sessions had over 200 attendees, so people were going to the sessions, the presenters and topics were good, why is interest so low for this track?
Does this mean the average attendee takes data management for granted? Perhaps they are not in a position within their company to make decisions at this level? Did I screw up and all of the other tracks were that much better? Does the average attendee work for companies that have data management all figured out?
All questions no answers, just giving you something to ponder.
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Jeff Sweeney Engineering Data Specialist |
For the record, the rumors of SolidWorks World 2011 being in Columbus Ohio turned out to not be true. SolidWorks World 2011 will be in San Antonio Texas, January 23rd – 26th. Drat, I just purchased a new hot tub and was looking forward to showing it off to all of you.
San Antonio seems like a nice second choice though. We’ll get ‘em next year Columbus!
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Jeff Sweeney Engineering Data Specialist |
Wednesday at SolidWorks World has always been my favorite…it is the day they give us a sneak preview into what will be in the next version of SolidWorks. These enhancements aren’t anything to bet the house on…I know of some things they have shown in the past that still aren’t in the product, but for the most part things they promise here are in the software by fall.
Here is a list of the “big hitters” as they presented them:
No Lenard Nimoy, but Mark Snider’s acting skills almost made up for it.
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Jeff Sweeney Engineering Data Specialist |
Every Wednesday of SolidWorks World they show the top ten enhancement requests for their next design cycle. Enhancement requests are submitted by users (through the customer portal or via other means) and are an important tool used to determine the direction of future releases. SolidWorks announced that over the last ten years, 70% of all top ten enhancements read at SolidWorks World have made it into the released version of SolidWorks.
Top 10 Enhancements read at SolidWorks World 2010:
While I can appreciate all of these enhancements, and would love to have them in the product today…how did #1 become #1? #1 would only affect users a few times a year, how could users pick something that would be used so seldom compared something that could help them perform their everyday tasks? Of these ten, here is how I would have ordered them:
10. SolidWorks should cleanly uninstall itself. (..and many others before this one!)
9. Graphical map of references
8. On the fly equations & Dialog boxes
7. Option to dangle children and not have to delete them
6. Exploded views for weldments
5. Better utilization of CPU/cores
4. Allow more types of assembly features
3. Increase stability
2. Simplify video card requirements (almost the same thing as #3)
1. File compatibility between versions
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Jeff Sweeney Engineering Data Specialist |
Dear Mom and Dad:
I was going to send you a postcard telling you about the fun time I have been having at SolidWorks World 2010, but the 27 cents for postage seemed a bit steep so I hope you enjoy reading this blog instead.
SolidWorks dropped a bomb shell on everyone during Monday’s general session. They announced plans to put SolidWorks in “the cloud”. Wow, this could be big! No more video card issues, no more upgrades, service packs, even crashes could be a thing of the past. Nearly everything we’ve understood about the SolidWorks applications could change due to this news. The big caution I have for you is to not base any of your business decisions on this yet. This is still all concept work and saying “I’ll just wait to do something because SolidWorks will be on the cloud soon” could mean a lot of missed revenue. With technology, you need to live in the present, keep an eye on the future. –If you wait till something better comes along, you’ll always be waiting.
Tuesday’s session was much less formal and highlighted an interview with James Cameron. The interview began with a ten minute video showing many behind the scenes of his movie Avatar. I always enjoy listening to people such as him…people who have done more things in a year vs a lifetime of nearly everyone else I know. I felt his message was to always plan and prepare to ensure you will not fail, yet don’t be afraid to try new things. Rest assured he said it much more eloquently than I just did.
Don’t forget to feed the goldfish and say hi to Aunt Eleanor for me!
Love,
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Jeff Sweeney Engineering Data Specialist |
Today it is snowing in 3DVision land – its been cold/rainy/snowy for weeks…the only thing keeping me going is knowing that next week is SolidWorks World in Southern California.
If you are going to SolidWorks World you were recently sent a list with all the technical sessions that will be going on…and there are a lot! (20 in just the first hour alone!) I was going to go through the list and recommend a few to you, but Richard Doyle has already done this and since my motto has always been: “Why do what you can hyperlink to?” …start here and work your way forward.
Go through Richard’s list with your yellow highlighter to mark the sessions that look interesting, then get out your orange highlighter and mark these sessions put on by the 3DVision group.
Reuben Felsheim – Monday 2:45PM – SolidWorks Drawings - Tips n Tricks – (hands on)
Jeff Sweeney – Monday – 2:45PM – Design for Reuse
Randy Simmons & Jeff Sweeney – Monday – 4:30PM – File Management with and without PDM
Randy Simmons – Tuesday – 10:30AM – Hands on Introduction to SolidWorks Routing (Tubing/Conduit/Piping ONLY)
Scott High – Tuesday 1:30PM – Xpress Yourself – DriveWorksXpress
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Jeff Sweeney Engineering Data Specialist |