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Fascinating articles about CATIA, Enovia, and 3DExperience

Check out this article from Beyond PLM:

http://beyondplm.com/2017/10/31/wrong-3dexperience-enovia/

It references this disastrous situation at Jaguar Land Rover where they have spent 7 years and $225 million with the efforts of 450 people to implement CATIA 3DExperience. Ridiculous.

https://www.engineering.com/PLMERP/ArticleID/13954/Is-Jaguar-Land-Rover-About-to-Stumble-on-the-Final-iPLM-Stretch.aspx

If you want to get nice and confused, spend some time figuring out the various versions of CATIA. (Understanding the differences between Pro/ENGINEER, Wildfire, and Creo Parametric is a piece of cake in comparison.) There are three major versions of CATIA currently on the market: V5, V6, and 3DExperience.

CATIA V5 came out in 1998, so it's approaching two decades on the market. (For comparison, in 1998, Pro/ENGINEER was on Release 20. Since then, we've had the 2000i / 2000i2 / 2001 versions, five versions of Wildfire, and four versions of Creo Parametric.) CATIA V6 came out in 2008. Yet a number of companies chose to stick with V5. Why? Because V5 files were not directly compatible with V6. (Compatibility between V5 and V6 wasn't added until 2012.)

V6 was intended to solve a legitimate issue with multi-user CAD systems. How do you perform concurrent engineering but prevent people from stepping all over each other? With Creo and Windchill, users check out CAD parts and assemblies. When one user checks out an object, no one else can work on it. Then when the objects are checked back in, other users need to update their workspaces with the changes.

Dassault wanted to get rid of the checking out, checking in, and updating. To do so, they got rid of the actual files - no more CAD parts and CAD assemblies. Everything was simply in the database. In order to make this happen, companies had to implement their CAD data management solution - Enovia - along with V6.

3DExperience goes even further, providing a single integrated platform between CATIA, Enovia, Simulia, and Delmia.

What does this all mean for companies? It's terribly complicated and expensive. Seriously, when you find out the architecture necessary to enable collaboration with suppliers, it will blow your mind. Check out the linked articles above.

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