I have worked on LoRa modules, CNC and plenty other stuff on your channel during my engg days. Although I no longer work in engineering. Great to find your channel.
@CheeSaiKimАй бұрын
I have Tesla K80 GPU in my PC but It seems does not do it's work during the finite element analysis. Anyone knows why?
@azarealbheri6876Ай бұрын
Hey guys ...thanks for the video..I was hoping for a spec sheet and the justification as to why you went for a particular hardware piece over another.. I'm planning to build one now... My goal is to run Ansys and Hypermesh along with CAD software like SW or Creo..Can you please or anyone from the comments help me with specifications for a medium budget build...As of now my focus is on Ansys mechanical, but in the future i may use it for CFD projects as well.. I'm hoping to buy something that's future proof for the next decade.. Any help is greatly appreciated!
@Theo2482Ай бұрын
Wonderful content, you have been an inspiration to many of us! I have a small question, i hope you answer it! I can see on 5:29 that the maximum stress you get is very high at 1296MPa. I assume you are using linear materials in that study? If so, why not use non-linear materials so you get a more accurate picture of structures that see very high loads?
@elementengineeringАй бұрын
That’s great to hear, thanks very much! Non-linear could definitely help if we want to delve further into a failure or understand longevity, however for this case, this linear study gave us the info we needed. Less time and cost to the customer, and we inferred what we need to change in ways of next iteration of design, and almost ignored the max value in this particular case.
@HSolDCSАй бұрын
Dude in a second made clear to me what firmware is 😅
@schmid1.079Ай бұрын
I've had a job in IT for several years and private interest way beyond that... and this is how I find out it's "firm" as an adjective, and not related to"firm" as in company.
@porrocoАй бұрын
We need a new device
@jimmyroserovallejo2 ай бұрын
I have a PWA with lots of access to hardware like GPS, notifications, etc., and it works great. It really just depends on how you develop it. The only issue with them is that they don’t pay app stores, and that's why they want to get rid of them
@faithful4512 ай бұрын
Nice one guys
@DigitalisRex2 ай бұрын
super excited about PWA's only to see that Safari hide all the fun stuff behind experimental feature flags.
@AjayMannYT2 ай бұрын
Great to see Ravinder after so long. Great Episode 🎉
@elementengineering2 ай бұрын
Thank you! The legend has returned!
@MO-fg2cm2 ай бұрын
Wanted to know if qt framework is used in IOT or not
@Zadamanim2 ай бұрын
that retroencabulator will look great next to my panametric fam
@elementengineering2 ай бұрын
Doesn't sound like a real product to you?
@Zadamanim2 ай бұрын
@@elementengineering Well it's more because it's a literal black box referred to only as "this thing" that has to do with IoT. Maybe I missed it, but I have no idea what it does or why it's great. Because of that, it reminds me of the retroencabulator.
@elementengineering2 ай бұрын
@@Zadamanim Fair enough! This clip doesn't really explain Cranio's purpose clearly, it was part of a longer conversation on how we're designing it for manufacture. Cranio is an industrial data logging and control system designed for easy setup & customisation in remote areas, somewhere between a proprietary system (easy but expensive) and a bodged Arduino/Raspberry Pi solution (cheap but difficult for most).
@Gibster2 ай бұрын
I don't know how I got here and ended up watching most of this video, but what the heck is the point of this talk? The question from 26:26 is the whole reason I came here, and the response is basically, "Yea I don't actually know what impact is, but I just know theoretically that it would be more efficient."
@elementengineering2 ай бұрын
I don't think that is a fair summary of his answer to that question. This talk is more about building efficient web based games, as opposed to improving existing ones. Thanks for watching!
@Gibster2 ай бұрын
@@elementengineering I understand what you are saying that the question was technically about "reimplementing" a game for an A B comparison, but the point I'm trying to make is there is no data or even anecdotes that indicates how "efficient" this strategy of design is. The one question I was hoping to get answered was "What is the tradeoff or impact from designing your applications this way?" I feel like this is a core part of the audience member's question.
@elementengineering2 ай бұрын
@@Gibster It's a good question! I've asked Leigh himself, who replied: The main drawback really is the added complexity if the game design does not feature realtime interactions between multiple entities. For example, a puzzle game is turn based and can be modelled well by a state machine (which can be messy in ECS), and adding new puzzle block types is straightforward with a standard OO paradigm. Implementing this in ECS might require creating many highly specific components and systems for every block type which could be laborious without inheritance and polymorphism and does not really align with the intended use case of modelling more broad concerns like physics, collision detection, etc. Hope that helps!
@nelsonn30423 ай бұрын
Great podcast guys, very excited for this series 👏
@matheshmurugan81243 ай бұрын
Useful podcast... Kindly do more related to design and engineering
@elementengineering3 ай бұрын
Thanks Mathesh, we sure will!
@Mkz0r3 ай бұрын
Damn poor nicole just casually making 400,000 permutations of a design 25:40
@elementengineering3 ай бұрын
She is a machine!
@porroco3 ай бұрын
Update the app already, firmware is too old.
@christopherderrell84703 ай бұрын
Great convo so far. Apple is the big hurdle. Slight correction. Bluetooth, USB Devices, Haptics & NFC (not mentioned but a good one) are all already supported generally on on the Web, e.g. Bluetooth since Chrome 56. And there's a few more cool features on the web coming! Excited to see apps render with WebGPU. Project Fugu is a good place to check out. Uber apparently launched originally as a PWA but moved to native eventually, would be great to know why. Love Web Share, love the ability of PWAs to handle URIs and, well love PWAs
@porroco3 ай бұрын
Shockwiz is an 8 years old tech that needs to be updated for now days shocks.
@TRK303 ай бұрын
I use it on MTB, but would LOVE if it would also be for motorbikes!!!
@deepak_nigwal3 ай бұрын
question: how do you make Ansys to learn these simulations while they are computing in parallel?
@esp43723 ай бұрын
My neck hurts just looking at how high your monitors are. Why are they so high?
@elementengineering3 ай бұрын
We'll be sure to discuss this at our neck-st staff meeting!
@anarcho963 ай бұрын
Great talk 👍. I love PWAs, and use them for every app I build. it will be the future of development for apps that uses web and mobile.
@porroco3 ай бұрын
Hey if you listen, please make a REFRESH. calibration could be better & make a one device strap on frame for data, but wireless psi monitor to work on both shocks
@porroco3 ай бұрын
Is time to update the shockwiz, app need a refresh and the device is like still using a gopro 4, with new device & new app i m in.
@kellymoses85664 ай бұрын
Music was TOO LOUD while people were talking, making it hard to understand them. I will never understand why people think music should be playing when people are talking.
@elementengineering3 ай бұрын
@@kellymoses8566 We’ll take that into consideration, thanks for your feedback!
@lidarman24 ай бұрын
I got me a Wiz.. Love it.....on the jumps from rollers comment; Well, you can do a roller such that you are unweighted on the down side and be basically in the air with near zero tire contact. No difference from a jump except earth is right there.
@creativepm94374 ай бұрын
Nicole is basically me but in the company I am in. I come from an animation background so as we are developing a product, I come in with blender and do some of the workflows that were shown on here. I work with Rhino CAD and Blender. Its really nice to see someone utilizing the same workflows and displaying blender capabilities.
@jakedrake10544 ай бұрын
The Heidenhain control is great!
@vinayaktiwari11534 ай бұрын
Is doing btech in iot a good option
@Igoreshkin4 ай бұрын
Blender is the future. Open source is the way.
@adri.progression4 ай бұрын
Great work Nicole and Ayrton! I also combine Autodesk Fusion with Blender-Octane for my work too. My friend was making an octopus, clipper boat, and ocean for his CNC class but was having trouble modeling ocean waves realistically in CAD. Because of my experience combining CAD and Blender and Adobe CC, I told him to run the water simulation in Blender then import it into Fusion to prep for CNC. I love the insights into your process and am keen on seeing what's next! If you haven't already, try out Blender-Octane which is a free version of Blender that includes Otoy's Octane rendering engine. I like it because I appreciate the way it handles metallic materials, lighting, and textures. Also, the quality per rendering time /resources is great because I'm doing it all on my gaming laptop as opposed to sending to a render farm / server rendering / big beefy workstation. I'm curious about what's next, especially for Simulation Nodes and as Blender evolves 🚀
@PabloVazquez4 ай бұрын
So interesting and fun to watch. Thanks for putting this together! (and great work Nicole! 💪)
@Nickel3D4 ай бұрын
As a mechanical engineer who also runs a product visualization business using primarily Blender, this video was AWESOME. Your team’s workflow outputs some amazing results, well done Nicole and others! 🙌🏼
@supertaurus20084 ай бұрын
This is all cool mate. Blender is an all in one package no doubt. But for you guys you should definitely look into adding plasticity to the pipeline.
@CONTORART4 ай бұрын
Aussie Aussie Aussie! With the CAD work it'd be worth giving Plasticity a go since it has a Blender Bridge so they work together great.
@Benn254 ай бұрын
Blender is the most incredible soft in the world!
@ZKI_design4 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you for sharing!!
@DerekElliott4 ай бұрын
Blender gonna take over the worrrllldddd
@rizwanzaman17934 ай бұрын
Hi Derek!
@salil8084 ай бұрын
hasn't it already?
@canon50594 ай бұрын
The OG Derek😂
@justin76494 ай бұрын
Glad to see more companies getting into using Blender. I will say that it can be quite frustrating with the process that Autodesk now makes you go through to export models from their suite. They've slowly been phasing out the importing/exporting of universal 3D file formats from each piece of their software offerings (you can find the supported file lists documented on their website by each year). I understand that's to keep you within their eco-system (much like Apple), but overall I think it's hurting their business in the long-run. To attest to Blender's practical application; I have made precise models (turned products) for real-world manufacturing, solely using Blender.
@bucklogos4 ай бұрын
Nicole said you convert the cad models to OBJ and then import them into Blender. You may want to check out an addon called Stepper, which allows importing STEP files. It's really quite good, it retains custom mesh normals from the CAD model ensuring smooth shading, retains the CAD file structure, correctly instances parts that are reused multiple times, etc. Really helpful for working with CAD files in Blender.
@adri.progression4 ай бұрын
Ahh thank you for this tip, I usually export .obj 's from Autodesk Fusion then throw them into Blender-Octane edition for my projects.
@tante4dante3 ай бұрын
Does this work with every CAD software, like FreeCAD/Ondsel ?
@Mix3Design4 ай бұрын
Blender is coming to be Industry Standard , cool to see it doing all sort of stuff
@michaelokere94674 ай бұрын
This looks really cool
@Noney80784 ай бұрын
You are missing one crucial aspect of a good FEA/CFD workstation when running on a "gaming" CPU. While the single core performance of these CPUs is great, these CPUs have only 2 memory channels while server CPUs have 4 and upwards memory channels (todays CPUs can have 8 or even 12 memory channels). Having a high clock speed core is moot when you don't have enough memory channels to transfer the data across the cores, that's the main reason FEA workstations work with server grade CPUs, you most likely bottlenecked the CPU with the constrain on the memory distribution between cores. Although if you only have a license for 8 cores you are probably fine (the rule of thumb is 4 cores per channel), but then you could have chosen much more "economically efficient" CPU since most of your cores are un-usable during a simulation run.
@deepak_nigwal3 ай бұрын
i was thinking the same about the CPU type they choose; but you also need to understand why they turn off E-cores, they still want to use the computer for other tasks such as modelling or documenting and stuff, while the P-cores are computing. The problem with server-grade CPUs is that they dont operate on high clock speeds such as 5-6 GHz, but only around 3 GHz with moderator overclock, which is what they are taking advantage of... since they only got a license to use 8 cores, i believe using a high clock speed CPU with good single core performance is their best bet rather than 24 core server cpu with 2 GHz on single core.
@nelsonn30424 ай бұрын
Great insight into product design and Blender, sounds like something I need to explore👏
@elementengineering4 ай бұрын
Thanks! Open source, great features, Blender is awesome.
@ChrisLaupama5 ай бұрын
Great talk. PWAs should be the future here. App stores should allow native or PWA as long as it falls within the guidelines.