Autodesk Research
-
While I was out on holiday, I received a newsletter from MX3D that I thought worth sharing here, too. It highlighted the fact that a year (actually 13 months, by this point) has already passed since the MX3D Bridge was installed in downtown Amsterdam. How time flies! The MX3D team put together this really nice video that shows details of the bridge's design, construction and installation: Here's the content of the newsletter article in question, © MX3D: We're very happy to celebrate the first anniversary of the installation and public opening of the MX3D Bridge! We are looking back on…
-
I'm back from our 2-week summer break, which we spent this year in Switzerland and Germany. The majority of the first week was spent up in the Bernese Oberland, a region we enjoy immensely. We were there all together – I was with my wife and our three kids – but in the mornings the "grown ups" left the kids to sleep in while we walked up to the centre of Adelboden. This was partly to give our puppy, Daisy, a bit of exercise… … but also because we love having a quiet breakfast at Haueter, considered one of the…
-
The Autodesk Research team is currently printing something very special in our Boston Technology Center with the hope of it being displayed at Autodesk University 2022 in New Orleans. I expect to be spending quite a bit of time near this object, during the event, and am very much looking forward to it. Even at this early stage it's already a thing of great beauty. Now for some pre-AU fun and games: if you can guess the object's function and how much it'll weigh once finished – within an as-yet-undetermined threshold – then I'll send you a souvenir from the…
-
It's been some time since I've shared any personal news, so I thought I'd throw a whole load of it together in an easily ignorable post. I've structured this post on themes, rather than chronologically, as it feels more coherent that way. The summer has been lovely this year, in Switzerland, which is in stark contrast to last year's horror show. We haven't been away anywhere much – as yet, at least – but I'll explain more about that a bit later on. For us the summer thus far has largely been about music. We've taken the opportunity to visit…
-
Registration is now open for this year's AU: the first time it's been held in-person since 2019, and in a brand new city (for AU, at least), New Orleans. It's being held from September 27th to 29th, which will be here really soon! The early-bird pricing of $1,750 is available until July 23rd, at which point it slides upwards to $1,999 until August 12th and then on up to the full price of $2,250 from there. And if you can't make it in person to the event, there's still the option to attend virtually for free. Registration for the "digital…
-
I'm in London for a few days this week for some internal meetings and a customer visit. While visiting the Soho office I checked in with my Autodesk Research colleague Allin Groom about a project he and Matt Oosthuizen have undertaken to help reduce the impact of waste in the office. The inspiration for the project was an all too common problem: a lot of waste generated by employees – many of whom buy takeaway lunches at local shops and restaurants – comes in the form of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) containers. While this material is nominally recyclable, Allin and Matt…
-
I'm very happy to share the news that a paper authored by current and former members of Autodesk Research has been published in the open access Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research (JAIR). The paper is entitled "Path Counting for Grid-Based Navigation" and talks in depth about the algorithm developed to power the Space Analysis package for Dynamo. Here's the paper's abstract, to tickle your fancy: Counting the number of shortest paths on a grid is a simple procedure with close ties to Pascal's triangle. We show how path counting can be used to select relatively direct grid paths for AI-related…
-
For the last few weeks I've been heads-down on various activities I can't blog about. It does worry me that this may well be the shape of things to come, but I'm also hopeful it's just a short-term blip, and that I'll find a way to get back on the blogging horse before too long. Basically, within the Autodesk Research organisation we're some way through a significant shift in the way we perform research, focusing on larger, more audacious – and ultimately more impactful – research goals rather than having a more piecemeal research approach with lots of smaller projects.…
-
Back in September I talked a bit about using a plugin for Rollup – the package bundler we use for Project Dasher – to start optimizing the bundling and delivery of JavaScript code. Over the last few days I've come back to this topic, as I felt it was time to dig into some issues. Dasher has three primary pages: The index page, where you arrive when you visit the site. The projects dashboard, which you can access if you have login credentials for the site. The Dasher viewer page itself, which most of you will have accessed via the…
-
The Autodesk Construction Cloud team kindly shared a post on LinkedIn, last week, about a project I participated in. There's a new book from Springer on "Innovation in Construction" for which I contributed a chapter called "Cutting-Edge Practical Research on Generative Design, IoT and Digital Twins". This chapter weighs in at 29 pages – of an overall 454 for the book – and here's its abstract: This chapter explores two areas of research undertaken by Autodesk over the last decade and how they both have the potential to impact the construction industry. The first area relates to the Internet of…