Posts Tagged ‘CellManager’

Fight back!

Sunday, 7 December 2008

How to increase your profits in a slow economy

Clearwater, Florida, USA — In a slow economy, software add-ons that consistently save dozens, hundreds or thousands of man-hours aren’t just “nice” things to have, they’re vital.

How much money are repetitive, time-consuming tasks costing you?

David Evans & Associates saves $19,596 per year by using Microsoft Office Importer. Oregon DOT saves $42,000 per year in man-hours by using FileFixer. Barone-Shultz saved just one of their clients $5,400 on just one project using CellManager, a savings of 90% of the total project cost.
Washington Group saved $16,400 using MicroStation Productivity Toolkit on just one project over one weekend and potentially saved millions of dollars in lost income. Valero Paulsboro Refinery saved an estimated $125,000 on just one project using tools included in MicroStation Acceleration Garage.

Increase profits and reduce expenses.
Axiom creates tools for CAD managers and users that not only make their jobs easier, but also help them get projects done faster. In addition, LearningBay’s e-learning courses make users more effective and efficient when using MicroStation and MicroStation products such as GEOPAK and InRoads. LearningBay’s “on demand” e-learning courses produce better results and yet are less than a quarter the cost of offsite training and less than half the cost of onsite training. What’s more, the training can be done over and over to keep skills fresh. That’s simply not possible with either onsite or offsite training without incurring additional costs.

CAD managers spread too thin
According to Robert Green’s “CAD Manager 2005 Survey”, 26% of CAD managers reported that “their number-one frustration was not having enough time to do their job well.” Surprised? Here are some other numbers from the survey:

  • Only 31% of CAD managers perform their management duties full time (meaning they have other duties as well).
  • 61% are in salaried positions (average base salary: $53,847, or roughly $27 per hour.
  • A CAD manager supports an average of 41 CAD users.
  • 16% have purchasing authority.

Cost justification
No matter how good a product or service is, you still have to explain its value to decision-makers in a language they understand: money. This is why the CAD manager has to be business savvy and where cost justification comes in handy. The below, real-life examples show savings in terms of man-hours. In each case, one or more Axiom products greatly improved the productivity of the user or users involved and saved the company large amounts of money. According to the previously mentioned survey, the average salary for CAD managers was $27 per hour. Typically, taxes, insurance, benefits, training, management, overhead and other employee-related expenses are about 20% of salary costs. Thus, the following examples use $33 per hour as the company’s cost for the employee’s time. The actual cost of each Axiom product mentioned in the following examples was only a fraction of the overall amount saved by the company by using the product. All of the products mentioned below can be purchased separately or as part of MicroStation Acceleration Garage.

Example 1
One customer needed to change 200 drawings from an existing design for re-use in a new project. The task required all existing reference numbers on all drawings be re-mapped to new project numbers. The estimated time to do this manually was approximately 80 hours. At an average of $33 per hour, total cost would have been $2,640. Using Global File Changer, the actual time spent was 3 hours at a cost of only $99. This is a savings of $2,541 or 96% on this one three-hour project.

Example 2
Another customer, who regularly uses FileFixer, comments, “FileFixer ends up saving us approximately 400 man-hours a year. We couldn’t be nearly as productive without it.” Again, applying a $33-per-hour cost to this example, this results in a $13,200 savings in man-hours each year. Keep in mind that the $13,200 is only the figure for the savings. It doesn’t even begin to take into account the extra profit from all the additional work that gets done in those 400 extra man-hours.

Example 3
Another customer states that, “whenever any MicroStation file came back from the client, our drafters would spend an average of about two hours finding and correcting the CAD standards violations. If one figures that we get about 20 files per submission sent back to us by the client, that it takes a drafter about two hours to spot and correct the violations and that there are about two to three submissions in the lifecycle of our design projects, then there are approximately 120 man-hours per project spent in corrections — time spent not earning any new revenue!” Instead of doing it the hard way, the firm now uses SpecChecker and gets the work done in five minutes instead of two hours. In dollars, that saves $3,960 in man-hours on each and every project.

Example 4
Another customer had 400 design files in a project where a non-standard set of cells was used throughout the design process. They had to replace literally thousands of instances of multiple cells throughout all 400 design files. They were looking at 330 man-hours to fix this and a late delivery of the project. However, using Global File Changer, they were able to update all 400 design files with the “Replace Cells” function in a little over three hours — only 20-minutes of which required an operator to be present. The remaining time was simply the processing time. The total time, including the processing time, was only 1% of the time the design team estimated it would have taken to make the changes by hand. They saved $10,879 just by running Global File Changer — once!

Savings plus increased production
The money saved in man-hours is only part of the picture. What these examples don’t take into account the value of the additional work that the users involved can now get done. In other words, for each hour of work that one of Axiom’s products can save a company, that hour can then be used to generate more income on another project. Free advice on increasing profits

Make the vendors vying for your budget dollars work for you. Use their resources to get your projects done faster and more accurately and don’t be afraid to try and implement new technology. Contact Axiom and schedule a no-obligation, one-on-one, online demonstration with one of our product managers to discuss how the products included in MicroStation Acceleration Garage can greatly increase your rate of production and maximize the return on your budget dollars.

It was twenty years ago today… Steve Palmer enters his third decade with Axiom.

Monday, 7 April 2008

Clearwater, Florida, USA — 2008 marks Steve Palmer’s twentieth anniversary working with Axiom. He took a bit of time away from working on new features for FileFixer to give us an idea of what it was like to be there at the very beginning of Axiom.

Guess what Steve does when he is not programming.

MicroStation Today: Hi Steve. You have been with Axiom for 20 years — what has been the biggest challenge?
Steve: Keeping up with David Greenbaum, the founder of Axiom. In David’s own words, “When you are your own boss, your work hours can be flexible — you can schedule your 70-hours per week whenever you like!”

MST: How did you find your way to Axiom?
Steve: I met David at a holiday party in 1987. At that time, David was a very successful computer consultant and software developer offering innovative new productivity tools to Intergraph sites. Intergraph users flooded David with more demands than he could handle personally, so in 1988 he asked me to help him with overflow projects.

MST: What is your most memorable moment at Axiom?
Steve: Working with David on site at PBS&J. PBS&J gave us access to their Intergraph CAD server and CAD workstations during off-peak production hours (evenings and weekends). David and I could work off site via dial up modem when necessary, but we would also drive across Tampa Bay to PBS&J for very long weekends of intensive software development. David would bundle a collection of technical manuals and food for the day on the back of his motorcycle. He asserted, “Given a sufficient number of bungee chords, any item of any size can be strapped to a motorcycle.” Over the course of just three (intense) Saturdays at PBS&J, David implemented six new product releases, while I managed to sweat out one new release. That product is now known as CellManager. That was my first taste of “Greenbaum boot camp”. I’ve been trying to keep up with David ever since.

MST: Any miracles you have seen with Axiom products?
Steve: One small phone company called us when they had lost their entire outdoor plan for the phone system. They sent the file to Bentley who said 65% of the elements had been deleted. FileFixer salvaged the whole thing. That could have put them out of business.

MST: What was it like when you first started?
Steve: Several independent developers, including myself, worked on assignments defined by David. David was an undisputed Intergraph design-file–format guru who mentored each of us. I remember when David sketched out the inner guts of a cell for me on a piece of paper (it was a stop sign). It was an intense period of software development. FileFixer, RefManager, CellManager, SpecChecker and other well-known Axiom applications originated during those first few years.

Soon, there was so much business activity, it became clear the team had to start working together in a centralized office. In 1991, I met with an attorney to establish Axiom as a corporation. Then I hired myself as David’s first employee. We started renting office space and moved business activities out of our homes.

MST: What positions have you held at Axiom?
Steve: Out of necessity, at one time or another over the past 20 years, just about everything. I’ve spent the majority of my time in our software development area.
Currently, amongst other things, I am the Product Manager for FileFixer. That requires constant evolution and innovation — and fast response.

MST: What do you like most about working at Axiom?
Steve: I love creating technical solutions to problems experienced broadly by our public. When I’m developing software, I completely lose track of time.

MST: What time saving MicroStation applications have you developed?
Steve: I developed early versions of RefManager and CellManager.

MST: What do you feel is the most significant change at Axiom over the past 20 years?
Steve: The quantity of personnel now on the Axiom team and the resultant exponential boost in Axiom’s capacity to service our customer base. Remember, I was David’s first employee. Early on, just a few people handled every aspect of the business. Now the company has teams of staff handling each division of business activity. I remember the first time an employee walked through the office whom I hadn’t met yet (someone else had hired them). It was clear that Axiom had taken on a life of its own.

MST: Anything you enjoy as much as developing software?
Steve: Yes, music. If you knew how many guitars I own (and how much space they occupy at our house), you’d grasp what a wonderful, understanding wife I have.

MST: Thanks, Steve.

New Year's resolution: Save time, reduce effort and maximize profit!

Monday, 7 January 2008

By Steve Palmer
Clearwater, Florida, USA — It’s almost midnight. You are wrapping up a project submittal for an important client. MicroStation keeps crashing when you attempt to open a vital project design file. The necessity for a FileFixer midnight miracle is abundantly real to you right now. Just press FileFixer’s <Start> button and you’re back to work in three minutes.

But FileFixer’s midnight miracles, despite being dramatic and life saving, are, in truth, only part of the story. FileFixer is just one of the vital applications in MicroStation Productivity Toolkit*.

MicroStation professionals, like you, can save time, reduce effort and increase profit continuously during the entire life span of all your MicroStation projects. Keep reading to see how Toolkit can benefit you all year long.

Get MicroStation Productivity Toolkit early this year and watch your company’s profit skyrocket.

At the beginning of a new project or new project phase, use FileFixer to ensure existing design files are healthy and whole before you rely on them. Use FileFixer for V7 to search for problems in your V7 files before moving them to V8. Use FileFixer for V8 to search for problems in your V8 files before corruption stops your project dead in its tracks. FileFixer can determine which files are healthy and which are likely to cause trouble – and FileFixer can automatically generate a list of the isolated troublemakers so you can immediately and efficiently repair them. This makes for fast and easy project preparation!

When setting up a new project, use CellManager to clean up and consolidate multiple, old, non-standard cell libraries. Eliminate the non-standard junk cells. Ensure your drafting staff start off new projects with one consolidated, fully-standardized cell library. The most recent release of CellManager allows you to easily select cells from one or multiple cell libraries and display just the cells you need for your project in a concise cell-selection palette.

If you are starting a new project or new project phase, use Global File Changer to standardize each project design file’s settings (locks, snaps, coordinate readout, view attributes – you name it!). Global File Changer can replace your obsolete or non-standard cells in multiple design files with the correct, standard cells (from the standardized cell libraries you just created with CellManager).

MicroStation users around the world use RefManager when they need to update reference file folder paths after moving project files to a new server or a new folder. RefManager can make short work out of standardizing attachment level settings or display settings in one or multiple master design files. Ahh, ready to go with perfect initial layout.

Plus, all Toolkit owners with active Axiom Maintenance Plus are eligible for unlimited support and on-line training. Get your questions answered fast at the start of your project (or as questions arise during your project). The entire Axiom team is at your disposal.

Project execution with Toolkit: Continuous time-saving ease
During the course of your project, use Microsoft Office Importer to import spreadsheets, charts and Word documents into your designs with perfect formatting. The beauty of Microsoft Office Importer is the ability to automatically update design files to keep your design files synchronized with the original spreadsheets, charts and Word documents.

RefManager is indispensable for updating or replacing reference file attachments as the project design progresses. Use RefManager’s “Clone and Replace” command to add new attachments (with proper settings and correct clipping) and easily replace existing attachments with the latest revision.

Wise MicroStation managers set up automated batch runs of FileFixer to search for problems once a week as projects progress. FileFixer creates a list of files with serious problems so you can repair corrupted files before they impact your work.

DgnCompare shows the differences between two versions of a design file. What was changed in the design file since last week? Was any billable work done? Is the project progressing on schedule? What did your staff do this week? CAD Managers can use DgnCompare’s reports to identify today’s drafting errors – making it possible to train or correct project staff now (to ensure standards are maintained for current and future projects). Get your staff (or subcontractors) re-trained fast and eliminate last minute end-of-project fixes. Get it done right, from the start.

When drafting work begins, use SpecMonitor to continuously monitor adherence to CAD standards as the work is done (not after-the-fact). SpecMonitor helps ensure the work is done right the first time – it’s also great for training new project personnel!

Project finalization with Toolkit: Preparation for submittal to client
When all project work is completed, use FileFixer to perform a final “Search for Problems” to ensure you don’t submit troublemaker files to your client.

SpecChecker can eliminate tedious manual proofreading. Just fire up SpecChecker and confirm whether or not all project files comply with your CAD standards. Plus SpecChecker can automatically correct violations of your standards. Going beyond traditional quality control, SpecChecker’s analysis of your files can also be used to correct and train your own project staff (or your subcontractors).

SpecChecker can eliminate tedious manual proofreading.

Resolution kept
Now that the majority of its clients have moved to MicroStation V8, Axiom is really pouring the coals on V8 development – adding enhancements more rapidly than ever. All Toolkit owners with active maintenance receive all product updates at no additional cost! There has been no better time to own Toolkit for V8.* [Editor's note: There are 16 applications in Toolkit for V8, 22 in the Toolkit for V7.]

The importance of integrating CAD and IT – An interview with Ken Shigemitsu

Friday, 7 December 2007

Washington, DC, USA — As Director of IT at Shalom Baranes Associates, the lead design firm working on the Pentagon after the terrorist attack of 2001, Ken Shigemitsu knows the importance of keeping everyone on the same page. The project, when it is finished in 2012, will have rebuilt space equivalent to two Empire State Buildings. As busy as Ken is, we managed to persuade him to take a few minutes to answer some questions for MicroStation Today.

From karate to mountain climbing to 3D, Shalom Baranes’ Ken Shigemitsu loves a challenge

MicroStation Today: Hi Ken, you work on a variety of high-profile MicroStation projects at Shalom Baranes — like rebuilding the Pentagon, for example. What are some of the problems you encounter in your position?
Ken: There have been plenty. I mediate and coordinate technical issues with our consultants and clients regarding CAD standards and IT-related issues. Technical issues such as translation between various CAD programs have become very common. There have been several occasions where large projects required that we incorporate the CAD standards specified by the client into the drawing set. In one situation, the implementation of the CAD standards established by the client’s CAD department was required for all of our consultants working on the team. Many of our clients have become very CAD savvy and understand the importance of CAD quality control. Therefore, our clients have started to require that we submit a set of coherent CAD drawings that adhere to their standards. Because of this, it has become imperative that our CAD applications are interoperable and offer the capability to quality-control check the CAD drawings we produce.

We use a variety of tools on a daily basis to help us accomplish these objectives. One of these invaluable tools is Axiom’s MicroStation Productivity Toolkit. We use CellManager, I and I (to name a few) to manage the working drawings. These tools allow us to automate processes, which saves us many laborious hours. As an example, I provides us with the capability to manage and repair problematic cells used throughout the drawing set. I allows our CAD coordinator to ensure the quality of the DGN/DWG files and compliance with the CAD standards required by the project. We have just started to use RefWriter and Title Block Manager to manage reference and sheet files to ensure that the most current changes made in the reference files are being updated on the sheet files. These applications are essential because they improve our users’ productivity by many times. We are exploring other tools that Axiom offers and are hoping to incorporate these applications soon.

MST: Shalom Baranes has worked on the restoration of the Pentagon, the Treasury Building and Washington National Airport among other major facilities. What are some of the issues with working on those projects?
Ken: One of the common requirements for government projects is to produce a set of CAD drawings compliant with the CAD standards published by the government. The demand to produce a set of coordinated and organized CAD files, from pre-construction to post-construction, is becoming more and more common. For this type of project, we must implement an additional set of CAD standards to satisfy the requirement.

On one of the projects, we actually developed and distributed the CAD standard to all of our consultants working as a team. We then used SpecChecker to monitor, update and manage the files.

Another challenge was to convert, audit and repair various versions of DWG (r14 – 2004) and DGN (J and V8) files. In early 2000, we also realized the importance of creating 3D visualization models. Since then, we have utilized various 3D applications to help us address these design issues. The 3D tools range from an interference detection application to virtual walk-through.

Lastly, we are preparing ourselves to be BIM-ready by closely following the National Standard for Building Information Modeling published by the National Institute of Building Sciences (NIBS).

MST: How did you get into CAD/IT?
Ken: After receiving my master’s degree in architecture, I worked as an architect for five years. During that time, I became fascinated with the digital revolution, specifically in CAD, 3D modeling/rendering, computer networking and the Internet.

I began my IT career in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, working for a variety of AEC firms in the early 1990s. I then accepted a full-time position as an architect/CAD specialist at Shalom Baranes in the mid 1990s. I am now the Director of IT there.

It has been a blessing for my career to have been given the opportunity to work with so many talented architects, engineers and IT professionals. I have learned a great deal of invaluable working knowledge regarding CAD/3D, graphics and IT systems. This has helped me set my foundation to be more involved in the CAD/IT management arena. Shalom Baranes has a reputation for its expertise in government, commercial, residential and institutional design. We work with a variety of consultants and clients who use various types of CAD applications. This has made us extremely versatile and competitive in dealing with CAD/IT issues, regardless of the size of the project or the application required by the project. I enjoy these CAD/IT technical challenges because it keeps us on the cutting edge.

MST: What would you like to be doing in ten years?
Ken: For work, I hope that our in-house 3D training will have made a difference so that in ten years everyone, including the designers, would be proficient in various 3D applications. I hope that my day-to-day challenges will switch from dealing with 2D drafting issues, to solving complex 3D design issues.

When I am away from work, I enjoy many different types of outdoor sports. I am also an active Karate practitioner, which keeps me physically and mentally fit. I hope to be able to continue to climb mountains and stay fit so I can enjoy other outdoor sports that I have not yet tried.

MST: What’s a book you wish you’d written?
Ken: A fiction novel regarding space travel beyond our universe. But more realistically, I wish that I had written a technical reference book. Based on my previous consulting experiences, I have noticed that although CAD and IT share so much common ground, they are often not integrated to work seamlessly. An IT manager may need to rely on a CAD manager for application configurations, whereas a CAD manager may need to rely on an IT manager to understand how to integrate CAD as part of the network to share the resources. For this reason, I wish I had written a user’s reference book about system integration — a reference book that would help bridge the gap between CAD (transition between 2D and 3D files), graphics (use of graphics in CAD applications) and IT (integration of CAD and Network environments)..

“I am hoping that space travel will become common and inexpensive in the near future, so the average person would have a chance to view Earth from space.”

MST: If you could trade places with anyone for just one day, who would it be?
Ken: Neil Armstrong. I don’t need to be the first human on the Moon, but I sure would enjoy being able to stand on the Moon and look toward the beautiful Earth we live on. I am hoping that space travel will become common and inexpensive in the near future, so that at least the average person would have a chance to view Earth from space.

MST: What do you predict will be the “next big thing” in CAD?
Ken: A lot has happened since the digital revolution in terms of how computers have become an essential tool. But at the same time, very little has helped us to be more productive as a user. The divide between a designer (using 2D and pen and paper), a CAD architect (a 2D user) and a 3D modeler is still apparent. However, I do see changes taking place and it is encouraging. A variety of easy-to-use 3D applications are increasingly becoming more intuitive and popular for those who have limited capabilities in using a complex 3D application. The more 3D exposure a designer gets, the better chance that they will become more proficient in the 3D environment. As much as BIM is being talked about, I think it will still take a while for the industry, as a whole, to figure out exactly what BIM is all about. For those who are interested in this subject, there is an interesting short article written by Nigel Davies, dated 26 March 2007 at this Web address: http://www.eatyourcad.com/article.php?incat_id=1478

I think that as the easy-to-use 3D applications become more advanced, more designers will start to use 3D applications as design tools, as opposed to using just drafting tools. As the CAD application becomes more 3D friendly, a designer would be able to quickly produce a variety of massing study models and they could be transitioned into a more precise and complex 3D model for rendering. [Editor’s note: a “massing model” is a simple, exterior-only, 3D model.] The process from creativity to visualization has always been 2D (a designer using pen and paper) to 3D (a modeler using sophisticated 3D application), and I think the creative process may become fully 3D in the not-too-distant future.

MST: Thank you, Ken. I hope you can find the time to write that book.

Quickly create custom cell selector files!

Sunday, 7 October 2007

Clearwater, Florida, USA — Axiom, the world’s most experienced developer of time-saving MicroStation software solutions, announces a release of CellManager for V8 with two nifty, new features: the ability to quickly and easily create customized cell selector files containing cells from multiple cell libraries and the ability to manage models.

CellManager has been carefully honed. Like one of Hattori Hanzo’s samurai swords, Axiom programmers have been carefully adding and sharpening features to give CellManager users an advantage over those wielding MicroStation alone. [Editor's note: Hattori Hanzo is the renowned samurai sword maker (portrayed by Sonny Chiba) from Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill, Volume 1.]

With CellManager, you can now easily customize your cell selector file with cells from different cell libraries.

Customize your cell selector files.
Just as Hattori Hanzo designs each sword to the exact specifications and needs of the sword’s wielder, Axiom programmers have designed the new release of CellManager to the needs and requests of the MicroStation warrior.
Users have routinely asked us for an easier way to create customized cell selector files. [Editor's note: In case you're not familiar with this, a cell selector file in MicroStation provides a quick way to find and place cells from a graphic palette. Clicking on the cell's image on the palette makes it the active cell and initiates the "Place Active Cell" command.] Axiom has answered those users with another sharp, new addition to CellManager.

The problem
MicroStation only allows you to load all the cells from a given cell library when creating a cell selector file (.csf). Using large or even medium-size cell libraries with MicroStation’s Cell Selector is impractical, since the user has to manually edit the “.csf” file to remove all the unwanted cells, one cell at a time. Large cell selector files also use up too much screen real estate or require scrolling in the dialog box to find the specific cell you want to use.

The “Select Cells” feautre of CellManager for V8 now allows the selection of cells, design models and sheet models from multiple design files. You can select models and cells by name or description or by using wildcards. Whatever cells you select (via the “Select Cells” dialog box) you can modify as a group using the “Manage” window.

The CellManager solution makes your life easier.
Using CellManager’s new Cell Selector feature, simply tag only the cells that you need and click the “Create Cell Selector File” icon. CellManager automatically creates a “.csf” file and opens it for use in MicroStation. With CellManager, you can quickly make any number of “.csf” files, each to accomplish a specific task. You can size them for practical use and keep them on a drive accessible by you or your whole design team. This new feature can slice time off each job and increase productivity for the whole team.

Model manager
Like a finely crafted sword, cutting through the jungle undergrowth, CellManager slashes through your design files and puts your MicroStation models in order (without spilling a drop of blood). CellManager is now able to manage all models, not just those with the “Can be placed as a cell” model property turned on. In other words, CellManager is no longer limited to managing just cells.
Now all the wonderful things that CellManager can do with cells, including scaling, modifying, changing element attributes, importing, exporting, documenting and rotating, can be done with models as well.

Control all of your cell libraries simultaneously.

Saturday, 7 July 2007

Effortlessly manipulate multiple cell libraries as if they were one.

Clearwater, Florida, USA — Axiom’s new release of CellManager for V8 is by far the most feature-rich advance in the application’s 20 year history — truly a quantum leap forward for all of you cell lovers.

One of the most significant enhancements in this release is CellManager’s new ability to open and manipulate all of your cell libraries simultaneously. That’s right — open all of your cell libraries at the same time, select one or more cells from each library and with a couple of easy mouse clicks, you can direct CellManager to standardize cell symbology, scale selected cells, rotate selected cells, update fonts and perform text substitutions in cells — and that’s just the beginning.

To start, use CellManager to select one or more cell libraries to work with. CellManager displays each cell library’s filename in one window and an alphabetized list of all library cells in an adjacent window.

This new release of CellManager now allows you to apply its modification tools to one cell, one library or multiple cells in multiple libraries (or any combination).

CellManager allows you to open, view and modify multiple cell libraries simultaneously. Additionally, CellManager’s commands can be applied to cells in one or multiple cell libraries — with seamless ease.

You can display and modify one or all cells at the same time — regardless of the cell library file in which cells reside. The cell libraries can reside in different directories or on your server or local computer — any combination of cell libraries can be displayed and manipulated by CellManager at the same time. CellManager makes it easy to compare and consolidate multiple cell libraries — now you can finally get all of your cell libraries under control with ease.

What if the differences between duplicate cells is not obvious?
After opening any number of cell libraries simultaneously, the new version of CellManager’s <Select Cells> button (on main dialog) allows you to select and display specific cells from each cell library. For example, you can limit CellManager’s display to cell names which match a wildcard, like “ARROW*”.

Let’s say several of your colleagues created their own line terminator cells in their own custom (but unauthorized) cell libraries. These non-standard mutant terminator cells are multiplying. It’s time to clean up.

Load everybody’s cell libraries into CellManager. That’s right, all of them at the same time. Then use CellManager’s Cell Selector to select just those cells which contain “TERMINATOR” in their description. Presto! Only the matching cells appear in CellManager’s display. Now use CellManager’s View window to inspect each matching cell. Tag (check mark) the non-standard mutant cells and use CellManager’s Delete command to delete the mutants with a single keystroke, even though the unwanted cells reside in several different cell libraries. This clean-up action would be tedious and time-consuming without the new version of CellManager. With CellManager, it’s effortless and fun!

Automatically select cells from any number of cell libraries — for example, only those cells with “TERMINATOR” in their descriptions. Inspect them with CellManager’s View window. Then tag (check mark) the unwanted mutant duplicate cells and delete all of them in one step.

Tame your wild cell libraries.
Space prohibits us from describing all CellManager features in this issue, but there’s another hot, new enhancement we had to squeeze in: an enhancement to CellManager’s Export command.

For those readers unfamiliar with CellManager, the Export command allows you to consolidate cells from different cell libraries into one well-organized composite cell library. Let’s say, completely hypothetically (wink), that you have six different cell libraries, all in use on one or another of your projects — but these cell libraries contain duplicate cells, obsolete cells and non-standard variants of cells (created by time-pressed or confused staff over the years). Pretty messy — inconsistent, non-standard designs and wasted time are inevitable. To remedy, just fire up the new version of CellManager, load all six cell libraries simultaneously, tag the cells you want to keep and export the “chosen few” into a single, perfect, standard cell library. (This could be done with earlier versions of CellManager, but not in one effortless step.)

With MicroStation Productivity Toolkit, help is there when you need it.

Thursday, 7 June 2007

Clearwater, Florida, USA — Sometimes there’s not enough time in the day to resolve MicroStation issues and get your design work done. That can mean working nights and weekends to make deadlines. That’s bearable once in a while, but it’s no way to live, is it? Well, in case you hadn’t heard yet, there’s a suite of software products specially designed to provide you the MicroStation help, speed and efficiency you need, when you need it — Axiom’s MicroStation Productivity Toolkit.

Design file corruption emergencies? Violations of CAD standards? Deadlines threatened by time-consuming tasks? With MicroStation Productivity Toolkit, you will have all the tools you need to quickly handle MicroStation emergencies.

Axiom has versions of Toolkit available for both V7 and V8 MicroStation users. The tools contained in each Toolkit undergo continuous updates and improvements so that they can meet your changing needs. Here are some of the breakthroughs achieved in just the past 100 days:

It’s not possible to describe all the new releases and enhancements in the space available here. (So call for an online demonstration!)

  • FileFixer for V8 now handles all major categories of V8 design file corruption discovered in customer files. FileFixer for V8 is the only application available anywhere that can open and repair files containing the most severe forms of V8 corruption.
  • Microsoft Office Importer enhancements continue relentlessly. Recent user interface improvements make it easier than ever to use. It’s no surprise that Microsoft Office Importer’s ability to flawlessly import spreadsheets of any size, with flexible formatting (unachievable with MicroStation), has made it one of the most broadly used MicroStation third-party utilities of all time.
  • RefMerge for V8, the software that automatically merges a design file and any or all of its reference files into one design file, now supports 3D files.
  • Global File Changer’s Modify Text command now allows MicroStation users to make batch changes to text in tags and dimensions — impossible with MicroStation alone. These are just two of the eight recent Modify Text command enhancements.

The facts behind the legend
If you haven’t witnessed it yet for yourself, you’ve probably heard legends about Axiom’s MicroStation Productivity Toolkit speeding up projects, saving time and increasing profits for MicroStation shops around the world every day.

“I love RefManager — I wasn’t looking forward to changing 1,300 reference file attachments manually,” says Chris Seymour-Smith of Capita Percy Thomas.

Here are the benefits that every MicroStation site will get when they own Axiom’s MicroStation Productivity Toolkit:

  • Free product enhancements. Toolkit owners with Axiom Maintenance Plus receive all product enhancements (such as those described earlier) for the version they own (V7 or V8) at no additional cost.
    “[With CellManager for V8], we already reached a higher automation level than we dared to dream of,” exclaims Jean-Paul Pors of Philips Medical Systems.
  • Unlimited support. Toolkit owners with Axiom Maintenance Plus are eligible for unlimited support at no additional cost. The entire Axiom team is available for help.
    Jason Cosgrove of Volkert & Associates tells us, “All of my experiences with Axiom and the staff, especially technical support, have been outstanding. The technical support staff that we have worked with deserve a special recognition for helping us work through some very difficult problems. Thanks!”
  • Free online training. With Axiom Maintenance Plus, you and your colleagues can participate in online training, scheduled at your convenience, without leaving your desk! Axiom professionals can deliver training to you and your colleagues on any or all MicroStation Productivity Toolkit applications.
    “The Axiom training was more than enough for my employees to get started using RefManager. RefManager works very well and the training provided us with the knowledge to use its full capabilities,” says Jorge Serrano of Ameren.
  • Purchasing the full MicroStation Productivity Toolkit saves you money — it’s by far your best value. For instance, if you’re planning to purchase a single-computer license of FileFixer, RefManager and Global File Changer (just three of the applications in Toolkit), you can pay just ten dollars more and receive the entire MicroStation Productivity Toolkit (rather than individual applications). If you think that’s a good deal, the savings are really astounding for site and corporate licenses! If you plan to purchase a site license of FileFixer, RefManager and Global File Changer, pay just ten dollars more and receive a site license of the entire MicroStation Productivity Toolkit!

Jean-Paul Pors of Philips Medical Systems reaches new automation heights with CellManager.

The savings are similar regardless of the individual Toolkit applications you are considering. If you already own Axiom tools, you can upgrade from one, two or three individual applications to the full Toolkit and save a bundle. Hard to believe? Axiom MicroStation Consultants stand ready to answer any questions you might have.

Even if you can’t immediately envision fully utilizing all of the 22 applications in Toolkit for V7 or the 16 applications in Toolkit for V8, pay just ten dollars more and you’ll have the full Toolkit arsenal available whenever you need it.

“I want to thank you and your staff for your exceptional service in getting the V7 and V8 Microsoft Office Importer to me at the drop of a hat. It made a big difference and the job went out on time. Great tool,” declares Richard Odum of Ghyabi & Associates.

That’s why Axiom wants MicroStation Productivity Toolkit at your site.

MicroStation sites around the globe use MicroStation Productivity Toolkit to save time, reduce costs and increase profits.

Add up free on-line training, free enhancements, the entire Axiom team that is available to support your projects and you have compelling reasons why you should own and use MicroStation Productivity Toolkit!

Take it from Bill Stout of Atlantic International Consulting Engineers who said it best, “The only piece of software that I use more than Axiom’s MicroStation Productivity Toolkit is MicroStation itself. This software [Toolkit] has saved me thousands of hours of work.”

Axiom and Philips: Healing the sick with CellManager

Monday, 7 May 2007

Eindhoven, The Netherlands — When a multinational electronics giant wants to increase quality and speed of service, who do they call?

Philips Medical Systems (Philips) of Eindhoven, The Netherlands is one of the key players in the world of major medical devices like x-ray, CAT scan and MRI systems. After a sale of such sophisticated (and large) devices, a hospital room must be configured for the most efficient placement of the equipment. For this reason, Philips has created over 1,700 MicroStation cells for site planning. These cells graphically represent the medical devices and contain technical information for installing the devices at the customer’s site. Philips’ site planners work with customer requirements to design the best possible layout for any rooms in which these devices will be housed. As part of this process, site planners browse through the available MicroStation cells and select the appropriate ones to complete a set of pre-installation drawings for the customer.

Using a combination of a new CellManager feature and MicroStation script files, Jean-Paul Pors, European Support Manager for Philips, is able to take a previously time-consuming manual process and turn it into an automated batch process.

A major impediment to the site design process is the huge number of cells from many different libraries that must be browsed to design each room. Jean-Paul Pors of the site planning support department at Philips had this to say:

“We designed a concept for improving the process of designing a hospital room and started the development with the help of DHV [an Information Management company] and Atos Origin [an Information Technology company]. The basic idea was to automatically generate system-specific cell libraries, so the site planners can have all the required cells for a specific system in one place! The master cells remain stored in their original libraries. We managed to generate configuration-based cell shopping lists (.txt files) via Excel, but found execution roadblocks in MicroStation.”

After considering all the costs involved, it was worthwhile for Philips to look for an alternate solution. For many years, Philips’ site design team had reaped the benefits of using Axiom’s popular CellManager application to document, update, organize and manage their cell libraries. So they enlisted the help of Axiom to remove the roadblocks and create a faster way to generate system-specific cell libraries. Axiom added to CellManager the ability to create sub-libraries from a list of selected cells contained in a text file. Result: Using a combination of this new CellManager feature and MicroStation script files, Philips was able to take a previously time-consuming manual process and turn it into an automated batch process. Jean-Paul Pors of Philips says: “Involving Axiom was a good choice! Because of the great new CellManager features, we now have a process that is far more advanced and automated than we dared to dream of!”

Using CellManager, Jean-Paul is projecting a 25% decrease in the time required for the site-planning process. CellManager can’t mend broken bones or lower your cholesterol, but can help heal those sick of browsing through massive cell libraries. No prescription needed!

She wants diamonds. You want MicroStation Productivity Toolkit.

Wednesday, 7 February 2007

CLEARWATER, FLORIDA, USA — It’s true that MicroStation shops around the world report saving time by using the software applications in MicroStation Productivity Toolkit. It’s true that many Federal and state agencies like the US Army Corps of Engineers, 38 state Departments of Transportation and thousands of engineering firms in 66 countries use MicroStation Productivity Toolkit to reduce project costs.

MicroStation Productivity Toolkit is the gift that keeps on giving you more time and increasing your productivity

Sure, with Toolkit you can complete your projects on schedule, below budget and with greater profit. You can impress your boss and your clients.

But let’s get personal. What will you do with all the time you save using Toolkit? Imagine leaving work on time for a change! Imagine spending your free time doing the things you love with those you love. On Valentine’s Day, Toolkit could be more effective than cupid’s arrow — a dozen roses or candlelight dinner won’t do you much good if you’re stuck at the office (without Toolkit).

“We could never accomplish this without the Axiom Toolkit.” D.D., Flour Inc.

“CellManager is killer, we love the thing.” W.J., Cobb Fendley & Associates Inc. [Note: CellManager is a software application included in Toolkit and is explained later in this article.

“Thank you very much for your prompt response and good information.” J.R., King County

MicroStation Productivity Toolkit combines Axiom’s top time-saving programs into one cost-efficient package. The V8 Toolkit includes 16 applications. The V7 Toolkit includes 22 applications. Each component application is designed to automate or simplify productivity problems common to MicroStation sites. If you run into a tedious MicroStation-related problem or have a time-consuming bulk modification task at hand, MicroStation Productivity Toolkit can help.

With FileFixer you can repair that file which won’t open on the eve of a vital client submission. With RefManager you can update your reference file attachments project-wide (wherever IT relocated your projects on the server). With CellManager you can consolidate multiple cell libraries into a single library and then automatically document the new master library for project personnel. That’s just three Toolkit components. Visit www.AxiomInt.com to learn about all 22!

And on top of all that, once MicroStation Productivity Toolkit is delivered, the entire Axiom staff is standing by to assist you with any needs that you may have.

“Pat your guys on the back (or better yet buy them a beer). They did a good job.” J.J., Washington Group

“You made my day.” G.M., Bechtel

“Thank for the research, it was extremely helpful.” K.G., Ove Arup & Partners

It’s up to you how to enjoy your free evenings and weekends. MicroStation Productivity Toolkit might be Cupid’s best kept secret.

CAD Coordinator — of famous historical heritage — organizes 1,000 cells in four hours with CellManager.

Tuesday, 7 November 2006

ATLANTA, GEORGIA, USA — Sometimes you need a little help from your friends. When CAD Coordinator Charles Pinckney of Perry, Crabb & Associates had the daunting task of organizing 1,000 cells, his friend in the IT department gave him a gentle shove in the direction of CellManager.

Charles found that he saved immense amounts of time by using CellManager to condense and organize his cell libraries. Charles shared his success using CellManager with us and we thought you might enjoy it as well.

MicroStation Today: Tell us about yourself.
Charles: I work for a great company called Perry, Crabb & Associates
(PCA) in Atlanta, Georgia. PCA is a consulting engineering firm for mechanical, electrical and plumbing design. Our clients are mainly hospitals in Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama. I am a CAD Coordinator at PCA, but I am also an electrical designer.

MST: What are some of the problems you encounter in your position?
Charles: Recently, I had to condense and update our cell libraries. I wondered how I was going to update all thirteen libraries with MicroStation V8 tools. Our IT guy Chip Atkins, who also is an electrical engineer by trade, had told me that CellManager for V8 would be the perfect solution to my dilemma. By using CellManager’s Draw Pages command I was able to print out a report of every cell with its attributes. I found out that I had a lot of repeated and outdated cells throughout the original thirteen libraries. With CellManager for V8, I was able to remove and place the old cells that were not being used into an archival library with great ease. I got rid of about one third — or somewhere around 300 — of the obsolete cells that were duplicates or outdated and organized the remaining 1,000 electrical cells into 11 libraries. What would have taken me eight hours only took me half that amount of time and was much easier than expected. I was able to edit far better with CellManager for V8 than the editing tools from MicroStation V8.

MST: What other products do you find beneficial?
Charles: RefManager is another useful application in MicroStation Productivity Toolkit. For example, we had a 200-sheet job with multiple keyplans [Editors note: keyplans are small icons on the side of the plot that show what part of the design file is being viewed.] and multiple sections. So, we had a total of six floors with 14 sections and what would have taken six hours one sheet at a time, only took about one hour. Now that is a money saver.

MST: If you could trade places with anyone for just one day, who would it be?
Charles: Bill Gates.

MST: Are you related to Charles Cotesworth-Pinckney, the South Carolina state representative that signed the Constitution of the United States of America?
Charles: Yes, it’s funny you ask. I’ve often said that that is my 15 minutes of fame.

MST: Until now anyway. Any words of wisdom you would like to share?
Charles: Favorite quote which I saw on a church marquee: “If you do what you’ve always done, you will always be where you’ve always been.”

MST: Thank you so much, Charles!
Charles: Thank you, MicroStation Today!