by Susan Cinadr | 11 Apr 2010
This past week, I had an opportunity to visit in our Huntsville, AL office. "The Rocket City" is home to Redstone Arsenal, Cummings Research Park, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center and, most importantly, Solid Edge development. Several of my European and Asian colleagues have never been to Huntsville so we took a quick tour only to come across this office:
(Note the outdated NCAA Bracket! It's ok Mark, I had Kansas vs. KY in my final too. Bummer)
Several people on this blog, in our customer forums and other places online have asked, "Does Burhop really exist?" "Is he only an avatar?" I am here to tell you that indeed he does and I have proof
Mr. Mark R. Burhop was giving a couple of colleagues a demo on the upcoming release of Solid Edge when I stopped by. As you can see, Burhop IS INDEED, very much real. Next you are going to say, "That's Solid Edge on his monitor!?!?" No, it's not. It's a pretty image of linear contact we put up to take the picture. We can't show anything about the upcoming release....YET! (just like I can’t show Mark’s real face…YET.)
Mark, being the geeky FEA guy that he is, was excited to tell me that that Kenneth Wong's recent article on Solid Edge with synchronous technology 2 about Sheet Metal contained a demo with meshing and solving on a sheet metal part. Kenneth notes: “With apologies to fans of Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, I’m appropriating … a musical term to discuss sheet-metal modeling in Solid Edge with Synchronous Technology 2. So no shaggy-haired dudes, no amplified guitars — just a few words about bending metal in pixels.” I had not read the article but after doing so, I searched some of the back issues of CAD publications they keep in the Huntsville office, only to find an old picture of Kenneth. Admit it, you had a shaggy-do, right Kenneth?
Read Kenneth's Part 1: First Encounter and Part 2: Stress Relief on Solid Edge with synchronous technology 2
Susan Cinadr spends her days helping Siemens PLM Software market the Velocity Series. Her passions include social media, working out and spending time with her two Siberian Huskies Logan and Kali. Follow me on Twitter.
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12 Apr 2010
Susan: Wow! Brought back memories of being on tour, man!
Though Nature has robbed me of my rocker hair, you’d be glad to know I still have my guitar and occasionally I play it, in between blog posts about Synchronous Technology. Now, if Burhop plays an instrument, we might be able to get together in Second Life and revive my musical career.
12 Apr 2010
I can back you up on this one Susan. I have indeputable photographic evidence of Burhop’s existence from last year in Nashville…
http://twitpic.com/6gibf
13 Apr 2010
HA! That’s great. Kenneth looks like Shaggy from Scooby-Doo.
14 Apr 2010
Kennith, I play didgeridoo but there are not a lot of bands looking for that despite its great sound. Believe it or not, I may actually have a recording of it in Second Life.
I’m going to have to be more careful…the cell phones with cameras may be my demise.
-mark
Susan Cinadr on Maintenance pack (MP1) for Solid Edge with synchronous technology 2.
CNC Blechbearbeitung on Maintenance pack (MP2) for Solid Edge with synchronous technology 2.
Balkrishna on Maintenance pack (MP1) for Solid Edge with synchronous technology 2.
Dehydration symptoms on Early indicators are positive.
Ian Webb on Announcing Solid Edge With Synchronous Technology 2.
Mike Payne on Announcing Solid Edge With Synchronous Technology 2.
David Breitstein on Get to the point!.
Alastair Robertson on Produce “spectacular rainbow-colored images”.
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