Sustainable Innovation 2011 – Farnham, UK, 24th – 25th October Posted by DEVELOP3D - August 12, 2011 We talk to Martin Charter, director of The Centre for Sustainable Design, about the Centre’s history, issues and trends in…
Autodesk Sustainability Workshop: Making complex accessible Posted by Al Dean - September 13, 2011 We chat to Dawn Danby, Autodesk’s Sustainability Workshop head honcho about the site’s exciting new updates For those that have…
Autodesk Sustainability Workshop: Making the seemingly complex accessible Posted by Al Dean - September 13, 2011 Those that have been reading DEVELOP3D over the last few months will know that we’ve recently started introducing more content…
Nvidia Maximus looks to bring order to GPU compute workflows for simulation and rendering Posted by Greg Corke - November 14, 2011 Nvidia Maximus consists of a Quadro graphics card and a Tesla GPU compute board, tied together by a unified driver…
Snap to it! Posted by DEVELOP3D - December 5, 2011 An interest in 3D tessellation and some supportive production methods transformed a college project into a successful business venture
D3DLIVE Speakers: Alice Taylor, CEO, MakieLab Posted by Stephen Holmes - February 5, 2012 Founded in early 2011 by Alice Taylor and three co-founders, MakieLab is a games-and-toys company, based in London, and is…
Martyn Day is inspired by Autodesk University 2011 Posted by DEVELOP3D - February 15, 2012 His trip to sunny Las Vegas to attend Autodesk University 2011 left Martyn Day slightly worse for wear but infused…
Educating BETA Posted by DEVELOP3D - February 28, 2012 If the speed of advancing software and technology impresses you, then you're too busy thinking about it; Stephen Holmes finds…
Hello Dolly: Inside MakieLab Posted by DEVELOP3D - March 12, 2012 Tanya Weaver recently went over to East London to vist Makielab, a start-up with exciting plans to create both digital…
The skills gap – often referenced, rarely understood Posted by DEVELOP3D - March 26, 2012 The Skills Gap. Something that’s often referenced, but rarely understood. Al Dean thinks it’s time the mainstream media started to…