| I was seriously wondering about the metal one. Let's go link by link. 1. 3D Makeover Link for metal CAD work says nothing about generative techniques. It's about additive manufacturing" letting them do designs like in the photo. 2. The antenna link says it was a generative design by automated search and simulation. Describes Dreamcatcher system that does this with cloud computing. Gives example of roll cage that looks kind of like the bike stem. 3. Bike stem link uses Dreamcatcher to do a bike stem. The video below shows visually the optimization/design process in a way that reminds me of T-1000's liquid metal in Terminator 2. https://vimeo.com/144713382 4. Engine block link says they did a load-bearing, engine block in Dreamcatcher. No other info. 5. Meta models link just takes back to the page you're viewing. Cute waste of my time... 6. Intuition link doesn't tell me about any of these things. Instead, it's some kind of analytics product for enterprises. Sounds like a mini-SAS with Watson's analysis or Q&A. So, there were some relevant links that were mostly Dreamcatcher demos. Ended with an irrelevant one that might interest enterprise analysts. This article's citations are definitely unreliable. It's mostly interesting artwork. |
They emphasize that Dreamcatcher uses a "top-down" style of design, so maybe they are using deep learning for NLP to parse requirements and then feeding those requirements into normal topological optimization tools?
[0] https://ti.arc.nasa.gov/m/pub-archive/1244h/1244%20(Hornby).... (pictures from their post on page 5)