by dorasmith | 04 Jun 2010
I’ve seen a lot of conversation lately in regards to openness in the CAD/PLM industry. So it seems timely to share some of the discussion and reiterate how important open standards are to us as a company and the PLM industry.
First some of the recent conversations along this thread:
We are definitely in the business of selling software. But we believe that the best way to do that is to meet our customers’ needs. Open standards are demanded by our customers. So openness is not just a philosophy I’ve heard Tony Affuso talk about nearly every time he speaks to our customers. We have to deliver on it – otherwise JT and Teamcenter would not be as widely used as they are today.
We commit and deliver openness in five ways: open business model, open data model, open architecture, open applications, open communities for innovation. That’s why we published the JT data format over four years ago and we continue to publish the JT specification so it is openly available. Last year the ISO gave it Publically Available Specification status. Next month, we will release the 9.5 revision of the specification.
Ralph notes in the Okino blog post that the company licensed our JT Open toolkit. It’s available to any company – including our competitors. See the JT Open member companies and vendors we’re able to list on our website. They are the folks driving the ISO work. It’s not our community, it’s theirs. We just get to be part of it.
So let’s continue the “open” conversation. Please leave us a comment, question or complaint and we’ll address them here in the open.
Dora Smith works in social media for Siemens PLM Software. She has spent her career in the PLM industry and enjoys discussing the use of CAD & PLM technology with customers, bloggers, trade media and analysts. Follow her on Twitter.
Tags:
PLM |
Siemens PLM |
3D |
teamcenter |
Teamcenter |
product development |
CAD standard |
JT |
Spatial |
JT Open |

04 Jun 2010
Dora, My best definition of standards is to compare it to a tooth brush. Everybody needs it, but nobody wants to use somebody else standard. The ugly truths is that standards are expensive and somebody needs to pay this build. Vendors need to start follow standards because it is beneficial for them and not because it is good for somebody else… My last thoughts about standards in CAD and PLM is here. - http://plmtwine.com/2010/06/03/what-is-the-future-of-cad-and-plm-standards/. Best, Oleg
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