DS SolidWorks Corp. Sells Millionth Education License

Students around the world use the company's 3D CAD software.

Students around the world use the company's 3D CAD software.

By DE Editors

Dassault Systèmes (DS) SolidWorks Corp. has announced that 1 million SolidWorks design software licenses have been purchased by educational institutions. Many millions of students at these institutions have fueled their studies in science, technology, engineering, and math, and gone on to obtain careers in the design and engineering community.

“We want our students learning and applying science and engineering, not struggling with unnecessarily complex software,” says industrial engineering professor Andrés-Amador García Granada, Ph.D., of the IQS-URL engineering university in Barcelona. “SolidWorks gives students all the capabilities a professional engineer needs —  including integrated Simulation software that we use to teach statics,  dynamics, thermal problems, elasticity, and fluid-dynamics — in the most intuitive package available.”

Many students combine their learning with competition.

“SolidWorks helps us continuously refine our ‘Thunderstruck’  robot’s design for the Battlebots IQ competition, blending the best of offense,  defense, weight, material strength, and sheer destructiveness,” says Senai Andai, 20, a junior-year mechanical engineering student at the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA). “The integrated SolidWorks Simulation software and intuitive user interface help us apply classroom theory to hands-on design,  manufacturing, and ‘field testing.’ This is invaluable preparation for our futures as engineers.”

DS SolidWorks backs up its software with educational resources, including:

“Our software is packed with all the sophisticated capabilities that professional engineers use,” says Marie Planchard, director of world education markets for DS SolidWorks. “We think it’s important that students have easy access to these capabilities so they can bring the advantage of experience to their internships and entry-level positions.”

For more information, visit Dassault Systèmes SolidWorks Corp.

Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

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DE Editors

DE’s editors contribute news and new product announcements to Digital Engineering.
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