Dyndrite-Additive-Toolkit
Dyndrite has spent the last three years working in stealth mode to deliver the Dyndrite Accelerated Geometry Kernel and Dyndrite Additive Toolkit.
Manufacturing software developer, Dyndrite Corporation has announced four new additions to its Dyndrite Developer Council, which aims to steer future progress of the Dyndrite platform.
The announcement was made at RAPID + TCT last week and sees new members AON3D, Aurora Labs, Desktop Metal and Impossible Objects join a number of additive manufacturing leaders including EOS, HP and Renishaw, which were first named during the Additive Manufacturing Users Group event last month where Dyndrite made its debut to the industry. The Developer Council forms part of the company’s Developer Program, set to launch later this year, which is designed to provide tools and resources to OEMs, developers, solution providers, and educators adopting the Dyndrite platform.
“To achieve new levels of creativity, ease-of-use, and throughput in additive manufacturing we need strong and trusted connections between hardware and software,” said Shawn Hopwood, Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Developer Relations at Dyndrite. “We’re excited to welcome our new OEM members and look forward to their wisdom as we iterate on the Dyndrite roadmap.”
Dyndrite has spent the last three years working in stealth mode to deliver the world's first fully GPU-native geometry engine, the Dyndrite Accelerated Geometry Kernel (AGK) along with the first application built on the new kernel, the Dyndrite Additive Toolkit. This new “hybrid” kernel and Additive Toolkit are believed to represent a milestone in CAD/CAM advancements for developers and OEMs developing next-generation applications and devices for designers, engineers, and 3D printing technicians.
"We're excited to be a part of the Dyndrite Developer Council,” said Jonah Myerberg, Desktop Metal co-founder and CTO. "We've been impressed with the capabilities, performance, and potential of the Dyndrite architecture, and we look forward to exploring how Desktop Metal can apply this exciting technology to our additive manufacturing roadmap.”
"We are excited to be working with Dyndrite to push the boundaries of additive manufacturing," said Len Wanger, Chief Technology Manager for Impossible Objects which launched its second generation composite 3D printing technology last week. "Combining Dyndrite's state-of-the-art GPU-based processing with the CBAM platform should help us to bring today's impossible objects to tomorrow's manufacturing floor."