DE · Topics · Resources · Sponsored Content

Advanced Product Design: Earlier Simulation, Faster Iteration, Greater Innovation

The detailed design process is complex and requires time, effort, and expertise to tackle efficiently.

The world of product development, manufacturing and production is changing. With Industry 4.0 we’re on the brink of a new dawn of automation and intelligence, with smart, connected products and the smart factories that produce them.

Autonomous drones capture progress as a new production cell layout is commissioned. Deep Learning-enabled devices with computer vision perform quality checks on the production line and provide data to continually improve processes. Intelligent, collaborative robots, “aware” of their environment, work alongside humans to assist with assembly tasks.

Advanced computing devices harvest huge amounts of data from products in the field, to feed design and simulation systems and help ensure that next-generation products learn from those that have gone before.

Virtual reality (VR) presents everyone in the development process with the information they need in a rich, immersive, and collaborative environment. Ultra-powerful workstations are used to design, simulate, and visualize products, production cells, and factories. Then, once manufactured, virtual products—or “digital twins”—can be connected through the Internet of Things (IoT) to their real-world manifestations.

At the heart of all of these processes, NVIDIA plays a strategic role in empowering the manufacturing industry to implement Industry 4.0. For the past 20 years, NVIDIA has sustained investments in research and development (R&D) to continually push the boundaries of graphics processing unit (GPU) technology. The use of GPUs has, for some time, extended far beyond simply powering computer graphics displays and design software.

Today, a wide range of NVIDIA software and hardware solutions enables manufacturers to develop artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities for industrial collaborative robots and autonomous vehicles in the smart factory. In addition, advances in GPUaccelerated workflows are powering productivity improvements and speeding time-to-market as manufacturing companies move forward with advanced product design for Industry 4.0.

The NVIDIA® Quadro® visual computing platform is helping product design teams radically transform the traditional product development process. The introduction of leading-edge technologies such as AI, virtual reality (VR), interactive physically based rendering, real-time engineering simulation, and 3D graphics virtualization, are driving the development of the next generation of smart, connected products.

Fill out the information below to download the resource.

By downloading this content, I agree to receive the DE 24/7 Newswire, a twice weekly free email newsletter (you may choose to opt-out in the newsletter).

Latest News

Nexa3D Signals Winding Down Operations
AM hardware maker Nexa3D issues alert to customers signaling scaling back

Technology Outlook 2025
DE readers let us know how they are adopting new engineering technology in our annual survey.

Ansys Collaborates with Sony Semiconductor Solutions
Collaboration empowers OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers to evaluate and verify performance of ADAS/AV functionality in all weather and lighting...

Indy Autonomous Challenge Returns to CES 2025
Event set to take place on January 9, 2025 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway from 2-4 PM PST.

3E EOS Expands AM Capabilities With Help From Stratasys
New investment includes F3300 printers, enhancing capabilities from prototyping to tooling and production for the aerospace, defense and automotive sectors,...

UCF Joins Digital Twin Consortium as Regional Organizer
University of Central Florida Research Foundation joins DTC as Regional Branch Organizer for Southeast USA

All posts