Exploring the Business Value of Digital Twins
"Twins" Credit: Aaure
Today thousands of technologies and solutions help businesses improve efficiency, create better products, evolve faster, and so on.
"Twins" Credit: Aaure
Today thousands of technologies and solutions help businesses improve efficiency, create better products, evolve faster, and so on.
If there’s anything the last decade has taught us—and the Covid-19 pandemic has punctuated in grand fashion—it’s that businesses must get digital or they may become invisible.
Medical laboratory professionals form the backbone of healthcare and the public health system.
The 3MF Consortium recently announced its latest volumetric design extension for encoding geometrical shapes and spatially diverse properties through a volume-based description.
This isn’t a new story: A novel technology disrupts society, bringing with it many benefits but also major risks and costs.
The importance of medical device cybersecurity is growing exponentially. As more devices become connected to the internet, threats to public safety mount.
‘Diversity means lots of things,” says Amir Goldberg, an associate professor of organizational behavior at Stanford Graduate School of Business. “These days, it evokes the idea of race or gender, but it’s also about how people think.”
People interact with machines in countless ways every day. In some cases, they actively control a device, like driving a car or using an app on a smartphone. Sometimes people passively interact with a device, like being imaged by an MRI machine.
There are three key things cobot developers and employers using cobots must remember when considering implementation: 1) human life takes precedence, 2) human life takes precedence, and 3) human life takes precedence.
In the wake of manufacturing and chip shortages, some may think that Covid-19 slowed down production on the whole as supply chain issues an