Siemens Digital Industries Software Blog Network

Siemens Digital Industries Software Blogs


NX Manufacturing

AI has arrived for CAM Programming: Smarter, Faster and Built for Industry [VIDEO]

Industrial AI is redefining NC programming by enabling faster decision-making, smarter machining strategies, and greater programming confidence. Explore how AI is transforming CAM programming workflows in the video and insights shared.

Polarion

Polarion Connector for Simulink (MATLAB System Composer) - Introduction and how it is used by Schaeffler (E-Mobility division)

Introduction to Polarion Connector for Simulink – Requirements & Tests Polarion Connector for Simulink® allows for a much-improved user experience over...

Simcenter

The new Simcenter E-Machine Design Early Access Program 2512

The Simcenter E-Machine Design Early Access Program offers users a sneak-peak at the latest enhancements and a chance to help...

Design with Calibre

Enhancing IC Verification: Smarter solutions for faster, more reliable designs

By Jonathan Muirhead Modern chip layouts are more intricate than ever, incorporating a mix of custom and third-party intellectual property...


NX Design

What's new in NX X Essentials | June 2025

A new AI Chat Copilot highlights the June release of NX X Essentials, transforming the way users interact with NX....

Academic and Future Workforce

Engineering student resume tips: Learn how to impress employers even with limited experience

A well-crafted engineering student resume shows employers how you think, the tools you’ve mastered and the impact you’ve already made, even if you have limited experience in engineering roles.

The Art of the Possible

The process of innovation: Then and now – Synthetic force fields as a worked example: Part 2

As a mechanical engineer I kind of get SDFs (signed distance fields), a field beyond or within an object's boundaries whose strength and sign is proportional to the distance away from that object's boundary. My innovation conception was maybe if that SDF was considered as a force field then it might be used to attract or repel neighbouring 2D objects so as to identify an optimal tessellation of N given 2D shapes

The Art of the Possible

The process of innovation: Then and now - synthetic force fields as a worked example: Part 1

What do you think about as you fall off to sleep? An embarrassing social situation event that you wish you could redress, or do you save that for when you wake up at 3am when the real despondency sets in? Don't worry, everyone experiences that to absolutely no avail. To bypass those embarrassing recollections I've of late taken to thinking about shapes instead. Different types of shapes, topologies of different assemblies of shapes and the forces that might govern their tessellation. Not everyone's cup of tea, but when needs must and you're trying to nod off...

Academic and Future Workforce

A step-by-step students' guide to accessing free software training on the Siemens Xcelerator Academy

Learn how you can access free, industry-grade software training on the Siemens Xcelerator Academy.