Autodesk Press Summit in Paris - Day 2
Wednesday, October 3, 2007 at 03:50AM
Joel

Autodesk CEO Carl Bass kicked off the day's presentations with an important new emphasis for the company: Sustainability. "'Paper or plastic?' may be the wrong question; why not bring your own reusable bag?" he pointed out. Carl and Buzz Kross gave examples of how Autodesk has initiated sustainability efforts within Autodesk, and even hired a "sustainability tsarina," Lynelle Preston Cameron.

The firm has also backed a PBS series, "e2: The Economies of Being Environmentally Conscious," that talks about sustainability and related technologies.

Two more user companies were on stage - Faurecia (an Euro 11b automotive company) and Renault. Both companies make extensive use of Autodesk products to produce virtual prototypes.

Future technologies: Here are three things Autodesk is working on, which will appear in some future release of their products:

Finally, I asked Andrew Anagnost about Autodesk's "anti-PLM" stance. (CEO Carl Bass said famously in February, "I only know of three companies with a PLM problem - Dassault, UGS, and PTC." The implication was that PLM is a cure in search of a disease.) "When we talk to our customers, they tell us their challenges are at the workgroup level. So that is the focus of digital prototyping. PLM is a poorly defined 'global unification theory' approach that is simply not relevant to our customer base," he said.
Article originally appeared on Joel Orr's World of Technology|CADCAM|PLM (http://joelorr.squarespace.com/).
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