Automotive Contract Jobs Sweden
We are currently looking for various enginneers to relocate for contract positions in the Gothenburg and Stockholm in Sweden.
Don’t hesitate to apply with your up-to-date CV on Job Search - IC Autodesign
We are looking for:
Project Manager SCANIA CAD/VPDM Starling waves
Automotive Design Painter full sizes clay models, preparation
Scrum Master Volvo SAFe, Kanban, VIVA
Service ability engineer
Business analyst
Data scientist
Logistic Engineer
Test automation developer Telematics and In-Car Connectivity : Linux, Bash, git, Gerrit, Jenkins, C++, Python, Agile
FIGMA
Product Owner
Software engineer advanced analytics and AI : ML/AI algorithms and tools JavaScript, Python and SQL, NVDIA/CUDA development platform
Supplier relationship Manager
Adaption Buyer QDCFSTR target Quality Delivery Cost feature technology Sustainability and risk management
Logistic Developers
System Owners for Sensors and smart components ECU systems UDS UNECE R155/156
Concept Design Engineer EDU e-motor housing
Functional testing Python
Test automation engineer Selenium and Kotlin
Polestar SW developer : React, JavaScript, TypeScript, HTML5, CSS3, Next js, Node.js, React Framer, GraphQL, Headless CMS, AWS
Transport Coordinator in logistics
Industrialization Project manager
Test Framework developer HIL GIT/Gerrit, C1 environment, Capl, Python VT/CANoe, CAN, LIN, Ethernet
System Engineer C++ code, python, GDB, CI/CD, Ansible, Audiophile, Digital Signal Processing, Automotive Ethernet
Accounting Specialist Expenses and Payment
Accounting Specialist Payrolls and Pensions IFRS
Infrastructure engineer PAM-Cyberark
Requirements engineer functional safety ISO 26262
Test object Lead Test object & facilitation
Data analysis Engineer Python SQL
Operational Buyer
Embedded software application engineer Android and Scrum master
IT project Manager
Data engineer C++, Java, Teamcenter, Solution Architect, knowledge of TC XML, PMXML, ITK,
Certification engineer
Certification and compliance engineer
Data architect
Project buyer
Purchasing consultant
Digital architect
Crash test coordinator
Data analyst
Model Geometry Engineer
Enterprise architect
Cyber security engineer
Creative sound designer
Thermal engineer
E3D: the new face of PDMS from Aveva
45 years is a good age for a company. For its anniversary, Aveva is launching a new version of its PDMS plant design solution, combining innovation and continuity for a community of users who are not inclined to technological breakthroughs.
A company of engineers serving engineers
Everything3D (E3D) is the new face of PDMS, the plant design software developed by Aveva. The editor's flagship tool needed a serious facelift to bring it up to market standards. But it was a gentle facelift, as CTO Dave Wheeldon explains, "It's about innovation without technological disruption. Our customers need to maintain full data compatibility from one version to the next. They also need to be able to customise their solutions, integrate their own developments or off-the-shelf software, without calling in IT specialists. This is why the software is always based on the same proprietary database and design mechanisms. This is a must in an industry where projects are constantly growing in size and where the development time can be several years.
This is an obligation in an industry where projects are constantly growing in size and where the development time can be several years.
So, how does this change in continuity translate? During the presentation of its new software to the press, the editor remained particularly vague about the new features introduced in "E3D". It was the concept of "Lean" that was emphasised, with the corollary of the need for work teams to be able to communicate information on the progress of projects with each other, and this from anywhere in the world. Dave Wheeldon says, "It's about responding to three major trends that we're seeing with our customers, plant designers and operators, ship designers: the widespread use of cheap 3D acquisition systems, mobile computing and cloud computing. Techniques that allow operators on construction sites to send crucial information back to the design teams in real time via updates and laser-scanned data, allowing corrective action to be taken without running out of time. "We can add a sociological trend: the new expectations of young engineers with regard to the IT tools of their daily lives, more fun, ease of use and responsiveness," continues Dave Wheeldon.
Cloud, mobility and point cloud
On a practical level, we were able to glean some information. First and foremost, the software retains its relational database architecture, a provision that allows it to handle large projects with multiple stakeholders. To facilitate the use of point clouds used for maintenance or revamping operations, E3D has new as-design/as-built comparison tools. For example, Bubble View allows you to position yourself at a precise point in the model to visualise the point cloud with a high degree of precision, without necessarily using a specific point cloud processing tool. The point cloud can also be used for clash detection.
To facilitate collaborative work, the network aspect, check-in/check-out, caching of data on workstations, etc. have been optimised. Engineers can thus work simultaneously on the same project from different locations, with a gain in performance, but lower bandwidth. A system of tokens allows the company to use its licences as if it were an internal SaaS and therefore to distribute them dynamically according to its needs.
In terms of drawing, a major phase of development, Everything3D benefits from the integration of an AutoCAD clone and, in passing, a modern interface based on Windows 7 standards. Finally, with E3D, PDMS moves from an OpenGL graphics base to DirectX, which is more powerful.
On the cloud side, things are not set in stone. At the press conference, Aveva's technical director presented a 3D digital model of a factory on a Windows touchscreen tablet, with the possibility of moving around within it, but this was a prototype. Data hosting in the cloud? On the customer's server? Only downloaded to the tablet? Use of 4G? These are elements that will not be defined before the end of 2013 within a commercial solution. For the moment, E3D runs on the client's servers, but allows for the integration of a Cloud architecture.
OpenAI services come to Microsoft Azure
Microsoft has announced the availability of Azure OpenAI. It allows companies to integrate services such as GPT, Dall-E or Codex into their cloud applications. The highly publicised ChatGPT should arrive soon.
It was Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, who announced in a blog the general availability of Azure OpenAI. It must be said that the subject is trendy with the recent media coverage of ChatGPT and the financial interest of the Redmond firm in the start-up. In concrete terms, Azure OpenAI has been in testing for a year and offers companies the opportunity to integrate OpenAI tools into their cloud applications.
Among these services, companies will be able to use GPT version 3.5, which is the generative AI engine used by ChatGPT and PowerBI. There is also Codex, the basis of Copilot, GitHub's code completion solution and Dall-E, an AI-based image generator. Among the uses, the Microsoft boss highlights some feedback from test customers such as Al Jazeera, which works with Azure OpenAI on content extraction, translation and topic scheduling. For its part, KPMG relies on the tool to make "significant gains" on its CSR tax system.
ChatGPT will arrive soon
However, ChatGPT is not yet included in the Azure OpenAI package. In his presentation Satya Nadella indicated that this service would arrive soon. Microsoft believes in the potential of the conversational assistant to the point of wanting to integrate it into several services such as the search engine Bing or in several programs of the Office suite (Word, PowerPoint and Outlook). At the Davos forum, the executive said that tools like ChatGPT are needed to boost productivity. "We need something that really changes the productivity curve, to have real economic growth," he said.
Lastly, the availability of the service is announced as general by Microsoft. But our colleagues at The Register have noted that the service is available in four American regions and one in Western Europe. It is likely that the announcement effect is spread over time on the deployment and that Azure OpenAI will be fully operational for all in a few days.