Archive for March, 2008

Rockin! Incredible Hulk Movie Trailer

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OK, completely non-relevant and completely having nothing to do with 3D CAD, but hen also having everything to do with cool.

C’mon! Ed Norton and Tim Roth turning into two huge beasties battling it out?! There’s probably some 3D mechanical laser scanning something or other so… relevancy achieved.

It’s in HD, so let it load.

Incredible Hulk HD Trailer

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Friday Smackdown: Ignore the Seismic Activity

web-app-icons.jpgReally it’s as if everything just came to a stop and then it was like a DJ took over with all the scratchin’ and mixin’ and then I just coughed them right up, crazy paperclips.

Free Web App Icons - I know you don’t have enough for your web apps already, so here’s some more.
Dell Latitude Tablets - Those fancy Dell Tablets are now in the refurb section. Some are about $1000 off retail!
8 Things they never taught you about networking - Only 8? Directed at designers, but has good stuff anyone can take away and chew on.
FriendFeed - The latest piece of the social pizza pie. A central hub for all your sociality.
Do The Test - This takes less than 30 seconds. Can you pass it? I didn’t dangit. If you do tell me.
March Madness on Demand - Watch the NCAA tournament live, while your not working of course, cause that’s just bad.

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Random Japanese 3D CAD Interface Video of the Day

Ya know, I’ve heard about people drawing 3D models in the air, but this is the first time I’ve seen it. To me it seems like a bunch of ‘keyboard-like’ commands in the air but, wow ya know, pretty close to what you might imagine huh?

3D hand input modeling system

You can see another video of the BlueGrottoFEP here and being used with AutoCAD Inventor?

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All About SolidWorks Tags Plus 2 Quick Ways To Add Them

solidworks-tags.jpg
“Oh man, Josh is doing a tip on one of those useless features in SolidWorks 2008! I have gaskets and pinions to engineer!! Who has time for some silly ’smags’ or ‘tags’ or whatever! I’m going to YouTube and watch squirrels race.”

Hey, hey, hey! Hold back your fury and check this out. You can find things quicker if you start adding tags. What are tags? I’ll explain and show you two ways to add them quick so you can get back to your squirrel videos.

What the heck is a tag anyway?
A tag is just a keyword. It’s been popularized by a lot of websites (Flickr, del.icio.us, Gmail, etc.) that allow users to organize items using keywords that describe their attributes. The keyword acts as a virtual folder the item is put into so it can be easily located with a simple search. A tag in SolidWorks is used in much the same way. And although it doesn’t seem your items can be organized with a few words, you can easily create an anal-retentive structure that helps with all that organization stuff.

Why Tags can be useful
Generally, it just makes it easier to find what you’re looking for. You don’t need to add extra properties. Actually, that property already exist. Just add $PRPVIEW:”SW-Keywords” anywhere you want the ‘Tags’ to show up.

Tags are gonna be the most helpful to filter the FeatureManager. When you need to find all the items tagged ‘Steel’ you can type that in the search and those items show up, even though they may not have the word ‘Steel’ in their Part or Material description.

How Tags are usually added
If you look down in the bottom right corner of the SolidWorks Screen, you’ll see a little yellow icon swx-tag-icon.jpg that when clicked pops up a text entry box. It will stay up till you click the tag button again (kinda annoying) and you can drag it to a different location but it goes back to the default location the next time (also annoying).

Select anything. I mean anything, folders, faces, features, suppressed items, buried sketches, configurations, reference geometry, etc. Everything, except edges, vertices and the file name in the top of the FeatureManager. You can add tags to the file from the TaskPane File Explorer. Now having said that here’s…

How to quickly add Tags to a lot of SolidWorks documents
There’s two ways and neither requires you to have anything open.

  1. File Explorerswx-file-explorer.jpg
    From the TaskPane, select the File Explorer Tab. Select the first file, hold down the Shift Key and select the last file. Click the Tag icon if the Entry box isn’t open and add the tags you want, separated by semi-colons.
  2. Windows Explorer
    Tags are actually stored in the Keyword properties of the file. If you go to your files in Windows Explorer (Windows Key+E) and select the group of files, you can right click, select properties, go to the Summary tab, select advanced and add the tags to the Keywords Value.

Something extra kinda cool
Sometimes it’s nice to have some price info on your parts. Try using a range of $-$$$$$ (1 dollar sign to 5 dollar signs) to categorize cost associated with components. Now you can do a quick search based on that to see the range of cost. This can then be programmed into a spreadsheet to make list that categorizes those components based on cost.

Now to put some tags on this post so search engines can find it easier. :) Do you use Tags?

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Student Designs in SolidWorks: Fruit, Rotors, Architecture and More

SolidWorks finished up their second year Student Design Contest a couple weeks ago and I’m finally getting a chance to look at some of the designs. I’m two things: hungry because I haven’t eaten breakfast and impressed cause these students did a rockin’ good job.

Most of the entries were from Universities around the world but a few were from high schools, including the winner, Matsuo Nezawa, who spent many hours modeling fruit and cacti. (The okra is a nice touch.)

All the entries look like they took an incredible amount of thought, some more than others but man, good stuff. Here’s the top three chosen. And here’s the other winning student designs.

swx-fruit.jpg

swx-rotor.jpg

swx-aec.jpg

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Bookshelf Design: Death of the Book?

modern-bookshelf.jpgI’m working on designing and possibly constructing a built-in bookshelf at home. It’s going to wrap around a wall and have an integrated desk in a spot that would otherwise be completely useless.

Amazingly enough, bookshelves have commonly been used to do just that. Make an unused space usable. That’s interesting to me because everyday I amass more digital information than paper-bound information. But having that bookshelf just makes a home that much cozier, don’t ya think?

On top of that there’s just so many designs and ways to use bookshelves. Would you ever get rid of your bookshelf for a wireless reading device like the Kindle? How will bookshelf design change? Here’s a thought. Where will you put all those software boxes? When will that go completely digital right?

quad-book-case.jpg
Freshhome Quad bookcase


Santos on Flickr

bookshelf-room.jpg
Bookcase bedroom via Core77

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SolidSmack and Twitter: Get Tips, Win Stuff

twitter-solidsmack.jpgYou can now find me on Twitter. As an added bonus when you follow me you will get some great SolidWorks tips and have the opportunity to win some cool stuff, the first of which will be coming up soon.

What’s Twitter?
It’s like a mix of IM and blogging. Some call it micro-blogging. It’s one of the best things I’ve used to share things quickly. There are a number of other social sites I’m on that I’ll share soon, but I’ll be using this quite often to get news and thoughts out quick and give away free stuff.

If you’re signed up, just go to http://twitter.com/solidsmack and follow me! See ya there.

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400 Page Report: Yep, 3D Displays Are Cool

philips-3d-monitor.jpgA very new and very large report on 3D Technology came out this month that “takes a realistic view of 3D display technology and its future in the professional and consumer electronics sectors.”

Being familiar with developing a product in 3D, you may like to know 3D display technology is spreading and could affect how you use a computer or even how you watch TV.

You can’t view the entire report and it cost $5900 USD (3745 Euro) to gain insight into this developing technology, but some of the interesting highlights mentioned are:

  • 6 major display technologies
  • Compatible technology
  • 3D CAD Image Generation
  • 3D applications and markets
  • Human Factors of 3D displays
  • Roadmaps for technology
  • A list of 650+ companies, etc. involved in 3D display technology
  • 3D Printing

Cool Factor
You don’t need to read a 400 page report to know this tech is pretty cool.

Usually a report like this is to prove that (more) money should be put into research and development. Who know who did the study, but I have no doubt that these types of displays will be so common in the near future that they won’t even be referred to as 3D displays, just displays. And I doubt they’ll look like what were use to.

Via BusinessWire

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How To Make A Custom Color Swatch in SolidWorks

color-swatches.jpgWhoa there buddy, I think you’re getting carried away with all of those colors. That much color is certainly not per procedures and we’re gonna have to beat you black and white.

It happens, I know. You want an accurate color for your model and you can’t help but spend hours dragging your cursor through the Color Properties to get just the right shade of used-wet-gasket-red or brushed-aluminum- anodized-gray. It’s affecting the way you work and driving you insane. There’s a better way.
Continue reading ‘How To Make A Custom Color Swatch in SolidWorks’

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3D Interface of the Future: A 400 lb Steel Sphere

3d-interface-steel-ball.jpgSo, I was in the sphere yesterday, right, and the boss says, “You’re 3d models are all mis-shappened, are you using this thing right?” He just doesn’t understand the stress of having to be in this thing for hours.

Ya gotta just love those virtual reality developers. They’re always thinking of the next way to make a virtual environment as authentic as possible. The VirtuSphere is one of my favorites. Just look at that honkin’ huge sphere of VR metallic-romp-about goodness. Forget that you have a few pounds of visualization equipment and padding strapped to you, you’re in a steel sphere man. That thing could tear from it’s rollers any second and wreck havoc through the office. Ahhh, the future.

What’s a little more interesting about this one is it’s relation to SolidWorks parent company, Dassault. VirtuSphere, Inc. is taking part in the V+R Challenge to help the Marseille Motion Science Institute obtain motion simulations of the foot.

You think VR has a place in CAD or in helping CAD development?

Via Crave

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