Aibuild has launched Aibuild OS, an ‘agentic AI operating system’ designed to automate the engineering lifecycle across CAD, CAE and CAM, maintaining design intent into production.
Aibuild OS uses Digital Engineers, autonomous AI systems that plan and execute multi-step workflows across different software environments. By automating data translation and process execution, Aibuild say Aibuild OS allows human engineers to focus more on high-level problem solving and strategic design.
The system can transform text prompts into images, convert 2D technical drawings into 3D models, and use Image-to-3D workflows to speed up early-stage design.
The Digital Engineers are able to convert raw 3D scan data into clean meshes, removing the need for hours of manual geometry repair. The AI agents can also process finished part designs to automatically generate moulds and fixtures featuring complex cooling channels and optimised design for manufacturability.
For additive and subtractive manufacturing, the system transitions from a 3D concept to a structural print and milling path without manual geometry cleanup or slicing adjustments.
Having established its reputation with CAM tools used by companies such as Ford and Boeing, Aibuild OS represents an evolution from vertical-specific software to a horizontal platform that applies manufacturing intelligence across the entire engineering stack.
“For too long, engineering capacity has been limited by human execution bandwidth,” said Aibuild CEO Daghan Cam. “We are removing these barriers. By allowing engineers to deploy autonomous AI directly into their workflows, we help teams solve complex production challenges, reduce lead times, and increase productivity.”
Aibuild COO Michail Desyllas, added: “Engineers spend hours moving data between disconnected tools and manually translating outputs. Aibuild OS orchestrates these processes as a single intelligent system. It is the operating system layer that manufacturing has lacked until now.”
Aibuild OS is now live in Public Alpha. DEVELOP3D readers can sign up for immediate access today here.