SOLIDWORKS Sell Awareness with URB-E. Today's digital market has a dramatic impact on how companies connect with their customers. SOLIDWORKS Sell is revolutionizing that experience with an online configurator that is geared for the masses, its affordable and scalable to meet the demands of any consumer. This video highlights how new and exciting companies like URB-E are using SELL to enhance their e-commerce market space. Check out more at www.solidworks.com/sell
Desktop Metal raises $65 million to bring metal 3D printing to more manufacturers
Metal 3D printing company Desktop Metal has raised $65 million in a round of funding led by Ford, with participation from Future Fund.Metal 3D printing company Desktop Metal has raised $65 million in a round of funding led by Ford, with participation from Future Fund.Founded in 2015, Burlington, Massachusetts-based Desktop Metal is setting out to make 3D metal printing more accessible to manufacturers and engineers outside highly specialized industries, as well as reducing costs and turnaround times for companies that already manufacture metal-based goods. Desktop Metal’s “end-to-end metal 3D printing solutions” include the $120,000 Desktop Metal Studio System, which is aimed at helping engineers build prototypes.
Onshape has announced the addition of two new add-ons for its cloud-based CAD design tool: SIMSolid Cloud and VisualCAMc by MecSoft. They were launched at the Pacific Design and Manufacturing Show, which was going on at the same time as Solidworks World.
MecSoft Corporation, the developer of industry leading CAM software solutions, has announced the availability of RhinoCAM 2018 for the newly released Rhinoceros 6 product.
Leading German Automotive Manufacturer Chooses Aras
Aras® today announced that the BMW Group is implementing the Aras PLM Platform as its backbone for test data management. This system will support planning, scheduling, execution, and documentation of vehicle tests and test results at various stages of vehicle development.
Manufacturing startup releases unprecedented pricing technology for CNC machining
Pricing in manufacturing and the search for the true economic cost of a machined part has been a challenge for manufacturers as long standing as the industry itself. According to recent studies, the existing pricing process results in cost discrepancies of up to 10X for an identical product (or part), depending on the company making it. Receiving a price typically takes days or weeks. Kentucky-based startup MakeTime launched their solution today: Network Pricing.
By Oleksandr Syniakov, Director of Enterprise Solutions at AMC Bridge. In our work with enterprise engineering organizations, we see a recurring pattern: the platform decision has been made, the APIs are available, initial prototypes show promise, and then the project stalls. Not because of missing capabilities, but because of everything that surrounds them: authentication models, cost governance, CI/CD pipelines, long-term maintainability, and the effort of moving from a working demo to a system hundreds of users depend on daily.
As product complexity increases and regulatory requirements become more stringent, engineering teams face growing pressure to ensure that design outputs consistently meet defined requirements. However, fragmented toolchains, manual validation, and weak traceability lead to inefficiencies, late-stage rework, and compliance risks. AMC Bridge has developed the AI-Assisted KiCad–Codebeamer MCP Integration Demo, a technology demonstration that introduces a new approach to requirements-driven design validation and compliance automation, in response to recurring challenges observed across client projects, where requirements management remains fragmented, inconsistently standardized, and often handled through emails, documents, or ad-hoc processes—highlighting a clear gap that existing tools, including ALM systems, do not fully address within manufacturing engineering workflows.
As manufacturing becomes more distributed and product development more complex, companies are under more pressure than ever to connect data across design, engineering, and production. The idea of a “digital thread,” this continuous flow of product data across systems, is no longer just a long-term goal, but something many organizations are actively pushing to implement.
As software vendors modernize their 3D platforms, transitioning to a reliable and widely adopted geometry kernel becomes essential for improving modeling accuracy, streamlining development, and accelerating innovation. To support organizations on this journey, Siemens Digital Industries Software and AMC Bridge hosted a joint webinar focused on Parasolid implementation. Discover how vendors can speed up product development by leveraging a PLM Components–based ecosystem and collaborating with engineering teams experienced in advanced geometry workflows.