Worldwide Leading Supplier in the Automotive, Industrial and Aerospace Sectors To Streamline Global Collaboration with PTC Windchill®
Worldwide Leading Supplier in the Automotive, Industrial and Aerospace Sectors To Streamline Global Collaboration with PTC Windchill®
PTC® Arbortext Software Solution Enables Golf Car Manufacturer to Publish Manuals in 18 Languages to Increase Global Presence
Early Adopter Anticipates Increased Efficiencies & Quality Improvements from PTC’s SharePoint®-Based Solution for Product Development
Maker of Formula Three, American Indy, GP2 and Le Mans race cars relies on PTC® Product Development System for innovative designs
PTC (Nasdaq: PMTC), the Product Development Company, in partnership with Hornby Hobbies (LSE: HRN) owners of the Scalextric brand and a long time PTC customer, announced the launch of an exciting new Science, Technology, Engineering & Maths based (STEM) curriculum. Secondary school students using the new curriculum will use PTC’s Pro/ENGINEER Wildfire 4.0 CAD software to design and engineer their very own Scalextric slot car.
Mathcad Prime 2.0 has arrived here in the UK, and is being hailed as a major upgrade from the previous version Mathcad Prime 1.0.
In the last 2 blogs, we discussed some of the new features available with Mathcad Prime 2.0. In today's blog, the focus will be on the increase in performance that will be a major feature of the product's release.
When Mathcad Prime 1.0 was announced by PTC back in December 2010, its release was hotly anticipated. However the absence of some capabilities present in Mathcad 15.0, such as the Symbolic Calculation Feature, raised a lot of criticism from loyal Mathcad customers.
With the release of Mathcad Prime 2.0 scheduled for 22nd February 2012, customer queries around the new functionality and features have soared! This Blog post will take a quick look into what to expect from the new version!
Although the definition of PLM will still cause a lot of debate, we believe that there's little doubt about the exact components that make up a successful PLM solution. A PLM solution that lacks even one of these critical capabilities should be questioned as a viable option.