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In 2009, the tech demo Inventor Fusion was released. In the summer of 2013, Fusion 360 was publicly announced as a cloud-enabled version of the original. [9] In January 2024, Fusion was rebranded, dropping the '360' from the previous product name 'Fusion 360'. [10] After release, other Autodesk products were integrated into Autodesk Fusion:
A Post Processor is a unique "driver" specific to a CNC machine, robot or mechanism; some machines start at different locations or require extra movement between each operation, the Post-Processor works with the CAM software or off-line programming software to make sure the G-Code output or program is correct for a specific Trademark machine Control Cabinet (Fanuc, Siemens-Sinumeric, Mazak ...
FANUC 10 FANUC 11 FANUC 15 FANUC 0 Series A, 1985–1986 FANUC 0 Series B, 1987–1989 FANUC 0 Series C, 1990–1998 FANUC 6 FANUC 12 FANUC 16i FANUC 18i FANUC 21i FANUC 30i [22] First production: 2003 FANUC 31i [22] First production: 2004 FANUC 32i [22] First production: 2004 FANUC 160 [23]
In 1986, GE Fanuc Automation Corporation was jointly established in the US by FANUC and General Electric (GE). Under the joint venture company, three operating companies, GE Fanuc Automation North America, Inc., in the U.S., GE Fanuc Automation Europe S.A. in Luxembourg, and Fanuc GE Automation Asia Ltd. in Japan were established (the Asian company was established in 1987).
Socket FM1; CPU: K10 (also Husky or K10.5) cores with an upgraded Stars architecture, no L3 cache L1 cache: 64 KB Data per core and 64 KB Instruction cache per core; L2 cache: 512 KB on dual-core, 1 MB on tri- and quad-core models
The pre/post-processor generates input data for many FEA and CFD applications: Guido Dhondt, Klaus Wittig: 2.20: 2022-08-01: GNU GPL: Free: Linux, Windows: DIANA FEA: General purpose finite element package utilised by civil, structural and geotechnical engineers. DIANA FEA BV, The Netherlands: 10.1: 2016-11-14: Proprietary commercial software ...
FANUC, a Japanese robotics company, has been a lights-out factory since 2001. [6] Robots are building other robots at a rate of about 50 per 24-hour shift and can run unsupervised for as long as 30 days at a time. "Not only is it lights-out," says Fanuc vice president Gary Zywiol, "we turn off the air conditioning and heat too." [6] [7]
Fred Brooks wanted the machine to have System/360 architecture. The final result was a compromise where cost concerns predominated: the system leased for under $2000 per month (equivalent to $19,648 in 2023) including Multi-Function Card Machine and line printer, compared to around $3000 (equivalent to $29,472 in 2023) for a comparable 1401 system.