PTC Claims 20%+ Teams to Use Windchill in FIRST Competition
Also announces the selection of executive VP and CPO James Heppelmann to
FIRST executive advisory board
NEEDHAM,
MA, Mar 31, 2008 - PTC (Nasdaq: PMTC), The Product Development Company,
today announced that more than twenty percent of teams competing in the 2008
FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) Robotics
Competition (FRC) registered to use its Windchill collaboration solution to
manage their FRC projects during the company’s inaugural year of
sponsorship. Founded in 1989 by inventor and entrepreneur Dean Kamen, FIRST
reaches more than 125,000 students in grades K-12 annually. The organization
offers accessible, innovative programs for children that build science and
technology skills and interests, as well as self confidence, leadership, and
life skills. PTC also announced the election of James Heppelmann, executive
vice president and chief product officer, to the national FIRST executive
advisory board.
The FIRST Robotics Competition challenges teams of young people and their
mentors to solve a common problem in a six-week timeframe using a standard
"kit of parts" and a common set of rules. Teams build robots from the parts
in order to compete in regional and international competitions. All
participating FRC teams are offered the opportunity to use PTC Windchill,
Pro/ENGINEER and Mathcad schools editions. Pro/ENGINEER is PTC’s integrated
CAD/CAM/CAE software that helps companies develop detailed, intuitive and
realistic digital product representations as well as related deliverables.
Mathcad is PTC’s engineering calculation software that combines a powerful
computational engine, accessed through conventional math notation, with a
full-featured word processor and graphing tools. Windchill, PTC’s content
and process management software, is a web-based application that allows
teams to store their FIRST competition information in a single location for
all members to access. The Windchill web-based system, hosted on Sun
servers, provides teams the capability to securely control CAD data,
calculations, and documents. Members can also email each other within the
system, and set up timelines and calendars to help manage their projects.
In addition to PTC’s software and hosting contribution, PTC employees in
Massachusetts, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Israel are supporting
the FRC as mentors, judges and regional volunteers. Many long term PTC
customers such as Battelle and Pelco have also committed time and resources
to help encourage student interest in math, science and engineering.
“Through FRC, FIRST presents high school students with the opportunity to
participate in a real-life product development experience. FIRST alum are
more valuable as a result and are better able to leverage the skills they
are developing using Windchill, Pro/ENGINEER, and Mathcad as they pursue
careers in science, technology, engineering and math, ”said Jim Heppelmann,
executive vice president and chief product officer, PTC. “As a member of the
FIRST executive advisory board I hope to help FIRST achieve its strategic
growth goals by strengthening the relationship between industry partners and
the FIRST organization. Recruiting, fostering, and retaining industry
mentors are vital to the expansion of the FIRST program and key to inspiring
more students to engage in professions that will bring advance technology
globally. PTC is proud to invest in this important initiative.”
FIRST Robotics Competition Team #839, “Rosie Robotics” from Agawam High
School in Agawam, Massachusetts, has been participating in the FRC for the
past seven years and eagerly took advantage of the opportunity to use the
full complement of PTC solutions. Comprised of more than thirty students and
mentors, the team used Pro/ENGINEER for some design work. All work was
uploaded to Windchill to enable continuous and remote collaboration - no
longer were work files unavailable. Mathcad was used to analyze a problem as
simple as the weight of the air inside the 40 inch diameter ball used in the
competition to the mechanical engineering analysis of the mechanism. “The
PTC solutions added a new sense of excitement to the FRC experience,” said
Jay Cameron, mechanical engineering mentor, team #839. “Windchill has been a
tremendous boon to the team’s operations by eliminating obstacles to work
stoppage from unavailability - students can access the project from
virtually anywhere to complete their tasks, which ultimately increases team
productivity.” Team #839 received the Regional Chairman’s Award at the
Boston Regional competition. This prestigious award honors the team that
best represents a model for other teams to emulate and best embodies the
purpose and goals of FIRST.
Rookie team #2387 from the Columbus Alternative High School in Columbus,
Ohio opted to design the frame for their robot using Pro/ENGINEER instead of
using the frame supplied in the stock kit. The team also relied on
Pro/ENGINEER to analyze the weight of its robot, identify the center of
gravity to ensure the robot was balanced and to analyze the robotic arm
mechanism to determine correct linkages and validate that everything would
work. By using PTC Windchill, the team was able to easily share its
Pro/ENGINEER models with disparately located team members and mentors and
receive timely feedback through Windchill forums. “Windchill is an enabler
for increasing the frequency of interactions between the FRC teams and their
industry mentors,” said Chris Brandon, B2e project director, Battelle.
“Simply stated, if we can have more interaction between the students,
teacher mentors and industry professional mentors, the students’ experience
with FRC is enhanced.” Team #2387 received the Rookie All-Star award at the
Buckeye Regional competition.
Anne Shade became involved with FIRST in 1998 as a participant on her
high school's FRC team. She began mentoring teams during college and credits
FIRST with influencing her decision to become a mechanical engineer. She now
mentors rookie team #2377, Chesapeake High School, Pasadena, Maryland, and
immediately embraced Windchill to manage all of the teams’ documents. “It
was very exciting to be able to start the team off on the right foot using
an industry leading collaboration solution and teaching them a disciplined
approach to product development,” says Anne Shade, mechanical engineer and
FIRST mentor, team #2377. “Windchill provides a huge advantage for these
students because they will go into industry already knowing the tools and
processes used by product development professionals.” Team #2377 placed 5th
overall out of 60 teams in the Chesapeake Regional and won the Highest
Rookie Seed and Rookie All-Star Award at that competition which has earned
them a spot at the Championship event in April.
By using Pro/ENGINEER, Team #2509, Hutchinson High School, Hutchinson,
Minnesota, eliminated the need to create prototypes, saving valuable time in
the condensed six week build process. The team used Pro/ENGINEER for 40% of
their design and reverse engineered the remaining 60% using parts converted
into Pro/ENGINEER from the stock kit that were pre-loaded into a Windchill
library. One team member found the rendering capability particularly useful
because he was able to view detailed measurements and immediately see how
changes to the measurements were propagated throughout the design. Other
team members felt that the Pro/ENGINEER mechanism capabilities provided the
best check and balance to confirm that Tigger, the team’s robot, would work.
As a participant in the PTC Global Education Program, many of the
students on the Hutchinson team had already completed a foundation class in
Pro/ENGINEER. The team used Windchill for project management and document
storage. “The short build cycle can be especially challenging for rookie
teams trying to coordinate all of the tasks involved in building the robot
along with marketing, fundraising and team operations,” said Daryl Lundin
and Jeff Smith, co-coaches, Team 2509. “By using Windchill and Pro/ENGINEER,
the team was able to increase their productivity and successfully complete
the build process.”
About FIRST
Accomplished inventor Dean Kamen founded FIRST (For Inspiration and
Recognition of Science and Technology) in 1989 to inspire an appreciation of
science and technology in young people. Based in Manchester, N.H., FIRST
designs accessible, innovative programs to build self-confidence, knowledge,
and life skills while motivating young people to pursue opportunities in
science, technology, and engineering. With the support of many of the
world's most well-known companies, the not-for-profit organization hosts the
FIRST Robotics Competition and FIRST Tech Challenge for high-school
students, the FIRST LEGO(R) League for children 9-14 years old, and the
Junior FIRST LEGO League for 6 to 9 year-olds. To learn more about FIRST, go
to www.usfirst.org.
About PTC’s Global Education Program
PTC's education program provides teachers and professors with complete
learning solutions to prepare a new generation for success in a
technological world. From secondary school to the university level, PTC
gives students the ultimate in product development education by providing
software, training and classroom materials to educators worldwide. Their
education program is a part of a technological literacy movement that seeks
to improve critical thinking and multidimensional problem-solving skills as
well as preparing a growing number of students to become engineers.
About PTC
PTC (Nasdaq: PMTC) provides leading product lifecycle management (PLM),
content management and dynamic publishing solutions to more than 50,000
organizations worldwide. PTC customers include the world's most innovative
companies in manufacturing, publishing, services, government and life
sciences industries. PTC is included in the S&P Midcap 400 and Russell 2000
indices. For more information on PTC, please visit
http://www.ptc.com.
If news like this is important to you, sign up for our
TenLinks Daily at
www.tenlinks.com/NEWS/sub_unsub.htm.
Related News
Aug 27 - PTC to Present at Citi Investment Conference Aug 27 - PTC to Present at Deutsche Bank Technology Conference Aug 27 - PTC to Present at Jefferies Technology Conference Aug 27 - PTC to Present at Kaufman Bros Investor Conference Aug 4 - 2075+ Attend PTC/USER World Event Jul 29 - PTC Announces DesignQuest Contest Winners Jul 29 - France's Yacht-Maker, CNB Selects PTC Jul 29 - EADS Selects PTC for PHENIX Enterprise PLM Jul 23 - PTC Q3 Revenue Up 21% to $272M with $14M Profit Jul 10 - PTC Q3 Conference Call on Jul 23, 8:30AM ET Jun 24 - France's Oxylane Selects PTC FlexPLM Jun 24 - UK's Wrightbus Adopts PTC Windchill Jun 9 - JLG Industries Standardizes on PTC Windchill Jun 3 - Cirrus Design Standardizes on PTC Product Development Jun 2 - PTC Announces Windchill ProductPoint Jun 2 - PTC Introduces ProductView 9.1 for Visual Collaboration May 20 - PTC Appoints James Heppelmann to Board May 19 - PTC Announces CoCreate 2008 May 19 - PTC Announces CoCreate Explicit Design Contest Winners MAy 13 - Sulzer Pumps Selects PTC Product Development System May 13 - PTC to Present at JPMorgan Technology Conference May 12 - PTC to Incorporate Into China Schools May 5 - China's Shanhaiguan Shipbuilding to Use PTC CADDS 5 May 5 - PTC Announces Innovation Design Contest Winners Apr 30 - PTC Opens Registration for 'USER World Event 2008' Apr 29 - PTC Channel Gets VARBusiness 5 Star Rating Apr 23 - PTC Q2 Revenue Up 13% to $258M with $18.8M Profit Apr 21 - Daktronics Selects PTC Product Development System Apr 7 - PTC Introduces FlexPLM 9.0 for Retail, Apparel Industry Mar 31 - PTC Claims 20%+ Teams to Use Windchill in FIRST Competition Feb 27 - PTC Releases CADDS 5 15.0, Optegra 15.0 for Shipbuilding Feb 20 - PTC Gets Top 10 in CMO Council's Customer Affinity Index Feb 19 - Lockheed Martin to Use Windchill Feb 11 - UK's DTC Research Center to Use Windchill Jan 23 - PTC Q1 Revenue Up 9% to $241M with $9.9M Profit Jan 17 - PTC Cites Wins Among Small, Medium Businesses Jan 16 - PTC Unveils Pro/E Wildfire 4.0 Jan 9 - Battelle Incorporate PTC 'Global Education' Program
Source: Material used in press releases is often supplied by external
sources and used as is.
|