|
AECbytes Feature (May 31,
2006)
BE Conference 2006: Bentley's Annual User
Event
Bentley's annual user conference is typically
held in May, and this year, it was held
from May 21 to 25 at the Charlotte Convention
Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. Named
BE, which stands for Bentley Empowered,
the conference this year drew around 2000
attendees, representing over 700 organizations
from around the world. Bentley solutions
primarily serve four vertical industries,
all related to infrastructure, and the attendee
representation was highest for Civil, followed
almost equally by Building, Plant, and Geospatial.
All Bentley's solutions for these four verticals
are based on its two main platform products:
the desktop-based design application, MicroStation,
and the server-based collaboration and management
application, ProjectWise. As in previous
years, the first day of the BE conference
was devoted to keynotes and general sessions
related to the platform products for all
the attendees, while subsequent days were
devoted to more discipline-specific sessions.
While I could not stay on for the Building-specific
sessions this year, the general sessions
and keynotes were very informative, providing
ample fodder for discussion. The highlights
of Bentley's product announcements at the
general sessions, an overview of the BE
awards, the products on display at the Exhibit
Hall, and my overall impressions of the
conference are captured in this AECbytes
feature.
To compare notes with earlier BE conferences,
see AECbytes
Newsletter #20 for BE Conference 2005
and AECbytes
Newsletter #9 for BE 2004.
The V8 XM Edition is Finally Here!
Those who attended the BE conference last
year will recall that Bentley announced
their next big release, the V8 XM Edition,
at that event and spent much of their technology
keynotes describing its features in detail.
It was described as the next big release
following the launch of the V8 (version
8) generation a few years earlier. As it
turned out, the release of the XM Edition
was delayed and it didn't see the light
of day until the start of this year's BE
conference. Therefore, most of the technology
keynotes were again focused on describing
the new features in the XM Edition, although
this time, they were accompanied by actual
demonstrations of the products as they were
now ready for commercial release. The focus
of the V8 XM Edition of MicroStation is
on enhancing the capabilities of the application
while making the interface simpler to use,
and its key features are summarized below:
- It features better graphics with real-time
interactive shading, allowing users to
work directly in shaded views rather than
working in line views and periodically
shading them to better visualize the design.
This has been accomplished by incorporating
a new display subsystem leveraging Microsoft
DirectX technologies, the same high-speed
graphics technology use in the video gaming
industry. Also new are features such as
dialog and element transparency, integration
with PANTONE colors, and display priority.
- A new interface feature called Task-based
modeling has been introduced, which dynamically
applies a specific set of tools, standards,
and interface elements to a particular
task in a work process (see Figure 1).
Users can create their own task-based
collections, which can be used individually
or across a firm to standardize core processes
and improve efficiency. Task-based modeling
is different from customizing toolbars
because a task simply makes a reference
to a specific tool rather than physically
placing in a designated toolbar. Thus,
the same tool can appear in multiple tasks
leading to greater flexibility in customizing
the interface and improving the usability
of the application.
Figure 1.
The new task-based modeling feature in MicroStation
V8 XM Edition. (Courtesy: Bentley)
- Links and references have been enhanced,
along with PDF support. It is now possible
to directly link an element in a MicroStation
drawing to the particular sub-section
in a Word document which describes its
specifications, and this link is retained
even when a PDF document is created from
that drawing. This allows integrated project
deliverables to be created that are hyperlinked
for easy browsing. Also, with support
for 3D PDF (as described in my review
of Adobe
Acrobat 7.0 Professional), an entire
project including 3D models, MicroStation
and AutoCAD drawings, specifications,
and Microsoft Office files can be packaged
in a single PDF document. A slick feature
that was demonstrated during the keynote
presentation was the ability to transparently
superimpose a marked-up PDF file of a
2D drawing, say a plan or section, on
a 3D model at the exact position where
the plan or section would have been generated
from, allowing both 2D and 3D to be viewed
in conjunction with each other (see Figure
2).
Figure 2.
Superimposing a PDF drawing of a plan with
a 3D model in MicroStation V8 XM Edition.
(Courtesy: Bentley)
- Other enhancements include a new Project
Browser interface that makes it easier
to organize and manage project information
(see Figure 3); right-click context menus
that make editing of objects easier; improved
viewing and navigation in 3D; the ability
to do an interactive daylight analysis
of a space in a 3D model; keyboard mapping
that allows each user to configure their
entire keyboard as desired; improved visualization
capabilities for photo-realistic rendering
and new animation tools; and 3D modeling
improvements such as creation of parametric
3D geometry, mesh modeling, and new handles
for interactive editing.

Figure 3.
The MicroStation V8 XM Edition has a Project
Browser for organizing content in a structured
fashion. (Courtesy: Bentley)
- MicroStation now integrates with the
popular Google Earth application by adapting
its architectural coordinate system to
Google Earth's geospatial coordinate system.
This will allow site information from
Google Earth to be brought into MicroStation
so that the building design can be conceptualized
in the context of the actual site. When
the building design is complete, the MicroStation
model can be exported back into Google
Earth as a KMZ (compressed XML) file with
the correct geo-referencing information,
so that it can be viewed on the actual
site by anyone using Google Earth who
has access to that file (see Figure 4).
This is similar to SketchUp's integration
with Google Earth, as described in AECbytes
Newsletter #23. MicroStation, however,
goes one step furtheryou can set
up an animation of the design in MicroStation
and push the animation path to Google
Earth, allowing that animation to be subsequently
viewed in Google Earth. MicroStation also
features the ability to drag and drop
3D content from the SketchUp-powered Google
3D Warehouse directly into a model,
and in a topologically correct fashion,
so that, for examples, trees will be correctly
located on the ground even on an uneven
terrain.
Figure 4.
Exporting a MicroStation model for viewing
in Google Earth. (Courtesy: Bentley)
All of these features will also be available
in the vertical solutions for different
industries, such as the BIM solutions for
the building industry. While MicroStation
V8 XM Edition was officially released on
the first day of the BE conference, the
discipline-specific products are still in
the process of beta testing but are expected
to become available in a couple of months.
For those wondering that this "XM"
name means, it doesn't really stand for
something. My guess is that the name was
inspired by Microsoft's "XP,"
given that Bentley continues to strongly
align itself with Microsoft and is an ardent
advocate of its technologies, as we will
see later on in this article.
Other Upcoming Products and Services
At this year's BE Conference, Bentley executives
did not dwell much on the V8 XM Edition
of ProjectWise, Bentley's collaboration
solution, except to highlight how it was
addressing the key challenges for large,
distributed enterprises along with MicroStation.
Its feature list includes a project caching
server for distributed data, access control,
digital rights, and digital signatures for
content management; smart search that can
look for information inside files rather
than being restricted to the file names
only; integration between applications that
can be achieved by standardizing on Bentley
applications; support for all open standards
and formats including PDF, IFC, aecXML,
and ifcXML; and support for streamlined
and concurrent workflows that can scale
to the level of a distributed enterprise.
All these are responsible for the growing
adoption of ProjectWise by distributed enterprises,
which includes 11 of the top 25 ENR firms
in the US.
At the conference, Bentley took the opportunity
to announce a new entry-level collaboration
solution called ProjectWise StartPoint (see
Figure 5), designed for smaller teams in
a single location, as compared to the larger
teams in multiple locations that the regular
version of ProjectWise caters to. Like ProjectWise,
one of the key features of StartPoint is
its ability to integrate with Microsoft
SharePoint, a portal and collaboration technology
that includes features such as file access
control with check-in/check-out functions,
version control, powerful search features,
calendars and message boards, and project
websites with user-level customizations.
Firms using StartPoint will have direct
access to the SharePoint platform collaboration
tools from within MicroStation, MicroStation
PowerDraft, and AutoCAD. StartPoint is included
in MicroStation V8 XM Edition and requires
no additional server software beyond SharePoint
technologies, so deployment for MicroStation
users simply requires installing the new
version. AutoCAD users can deploy StartPoint
by installing a free downloadable plug-in.
Both, however, require the purchase of a
ProjectWise Named User License. StartPoint
is intended to be a cost-effective starting
point for organizations that wish to grow
to high-end ProjectWise capabilities, and
the fact that the name selected for this
product is so similar to "SharePoint"
(to the extent that it's easy to get confused
between the two) again reflects Bentley's
strong desire to be aligned with the world's
leading software company.
Figure 5.
The new entry-level collaboration tool,
ProjectWise StartPoint. (Courtesy: Bentley)
In the Building vertical, an exciting development
is the upcoming commercial launch of GenerativeComponents,
a long-standing research initiative that
has been in the beta testing stage for several
years now. It can be thought of as parametric
technology specifically for the creation
of freeform shapes. Objects are created,
not so much by modeling, but by defining
an intricate set of relationships, which
allows multiple design variations to be
easily explored for a project simply by
changing one of the controlling parameters.
It is fascinating to watch a change in one
variable ripple through an entire structure
of complex geometric forms. The technology
also helps in the fabrication of the individual
components of these forms. Several signature
buildings with challenging geometries have
been designed with the use of GenerativeComponents
by early adopters working with the beta
version, such as London's Swiss
Re building (also know as the "Gherkin")
by Foster and Partners. The latest example
of a project designed using GenerativeComponents,
highlighted at this year's BE conference,
is KPF's Bishopsgate
Tower in London (see Figure 6).
Figure 6.
The challenging geometry of the Bishopsgate
Tower in London was designed using Bentley's
GenerativeComponents. (Courtesy: Bentley)
Also relevant to the Building vertical
is Bentley's new "Integrated Engineering"
initiative, that was launched when it acquired
two leading vendors of structural analysis
solutions earlier this year: Research Engineers
International (REI), developers of the STAAD.Pro
line of structural engineering analysis
software; and RAM International, developers
of the RAM product line of structural engineering
modeling, analysis, and design software.
The focus of the Integrated Engineering
initiative is to integrate engineering analysis,
design, and documentation solutions by providing
a direct connection from Bentley Structure
to the STAAD and RAM products, allowing
engineers to easily revisit decisions at
any point in their workflow as they iteratively
refine and optimize the design.
A new service offering announced at the
BE conference was Bentley LEARN, an on-demand
elearning program that is starting with
over 800 hours of training. It is available
on a subscription basis as a companion to
Bentley's main software subscription program,
Bentley SELECT, and is priced at 20% of
the SELECT subscription.
Bentley also shared some features under
development that will soon be available
in the form of upgrades to the V8 XM Edition.
These include new geometry creation and
editing tools; improvements in fields, text,
and title blocks; the ability to define
geometric relationships and constraints
between elements; support for the 2007 version
of the DWG file format; and the ability
for multiple users to simultaneously edit
a shared file and have ProjectWise merge
their changes when they are posted back
to the master copy. Looking further ahead,
Bentley will continue to integrate and work
with upcoming technologies and innovations
from Microsoft, such as Web 2.0, .NET, the
Vista operating system, and the next version
of Microsoft Office, which is Office 2007.
Bentley took the opportunity to highlight
the importance of having an open and accessible
native file format like DGN as opposed to
a protected and closed one like Autodesk's
DWG by giving the example of Office 2007,
whose native file format will be changed
to a compressed form of XMLwhich is
stable, open, and extensible. Bentley will
also explore the possibility of switching
to XML as the native file format for its
own applications.
The BE Awards and Highlights from the
Exhibit Floor
As in previous BE conferences,
the BE Awards of Excellence were a major
highlight of the show, being presented in
an Oscar-like fashion at a special evening
dinner ceremony. This year's host for the
event was Peter Sagal of the National Public
Radio program "Wait, Wait, Don't Tell
Me!", and his comic wisecracks at regular
intervals made for a light-hearted and fun
show. There were 260 entries across all
the four verticals in the professional category,
of which 29 projects received awards. In
addition, there were some academic awards
as well. Most of the awards for the Building
vertical were based on the use of BIM, as
shown in the listing of the winners in each
category below:
- BIM for Architecture: NBBJ - Providence
Park Hospital
- BIM for Building Engineering: Arup
- Façade for Westfield Parramatta
Transport
Interchange
- BIM for Multiple Disciplines: Building
Design Partnership Ltd - Bridge Academy,
Hackney
- BIM for Simulation and Visualization:
NBBJ - i21 Intervention Suite for the
21st Century
- Building Managed Environment: Capita
Percy Thomas - St Helens & Knowsley
Hospital
- Building New Technology Adoption:
Ghafari Associates Inc - Renaissance
Boston Waterfront Hotel
It will be interesting to compare this
list with the upcoming BIM Awards hosted
by the AIA TAP group, which will be announced
in Los Angeles at the AIA
TAP conference next week, to see if
there are any overlaps.
The Exhibit Floor at the BE conference
showcased various products from Bentley
and other vendors that work with Bentley
solutions. Here is a quick round-up, starting
with those who regularly exhibit at this
show every year. Adobe, a leading partner,
was demonstrating both Adobe
Acrobat 7.0 Professional and the more
recent Adobe
Acrobat 3D, which allows design professionals
to publish 3D design information from most
of the major CAD and BIM applications in
PDF format and share it for review with
any computer user who has access to the
free Adobe Reader software. HP showed an
array of workstations especially configured
for different levels of MicroStation users,
starting from HP
xw4300 Workstation for a standard user;
HP
xw6200 Workstation for an advanced user;
HP
xw9300 Workstation for a power user;
and HP
nw8240 Mobile Workstation for a power
user on the go. Océ took the opportunity
to demonstrate its latest product targeted
towards design professionals: the TCS500
wide format color print, copy, and scan
system which performs all these tasks simultaneously
and includes features such as the automatic
optimization of print quality and print
settings when printing lines, text, and
images on the same page, and color management
for full control of color output. Other
printing and scanning products on display
were Ricoh
480W, a wide format copying, printing,
and scanning system that includes a built-in
document server for storing up to 80 GBs
of document data and a scan-to-email option
for instantly sending scanned documents
by email; and Vidar's Titan
H36, a low-cost wide format color scanner
that can be configured for both stand-alone
and network scan and copy tasks. On the
3D printing front, Contexwhich acquired
the leading 3D printing company, Z Corp,
some time agoshowed its latest products:
the DESIGNmate
Mx monochrome 3D printer, and its color
version, DESIGNmate
Cx, which uses high-fidelity, 24-bit
color capabilities to produce full-color
models for better visualization of 3D designs.
Getting back to software solutions, there
were also products from vendors that I had
not seen at previous BE conferences. One
of these was Altiva Software, which develops
CADconform,
a solution for managing corporate CAD standards
for both AutoCAD and MicroStation. Another
was Mill Creek Systems, showing applications
such as Detail
Manager PLUS for organization-wide management
of standard CAD details for MicroStation
V8, and RAS/EDIT
for cost-effective editing of raster images
inside MicroStation, very useful for making
modifications to scanned drawings of older
projects done before the CAD era. VisMasters,
a new company that includes ArchVision,
developer of the popular RPC content libraries,
showed not only its RPC libraries but also
other products it resells that work with
MicroStation including Piranesi, an architectural
rendering application, and TurnTool, an
application that allows designers to enable
others to view their 3D models. Bentley
product resellers such as Axiom,
ModernTech,
and Archway
Systems were also at hand to promote
Bentley applications and their training
and consulting services.
Overall Impressions
This was my third visit to a BE conference,
and as I have pointed out in the past, it
continues to have a very strong technological
focus. There is, inevitably, some amount
of marketing content, especially in events
such as the BE Awards ceremony, and in the
CEO's keynote that presents an overview
of the company's performance. However, the
emphasis is largely and overwhelmingly on
the technology. The technology keynotes
dwell not only on the new features of upcoming
Bentley products, but also extensively on
the technology underlying them as well as
the technologies that future releases will
build upon. As a result, attending the technology
keynotes at the BE conference is always
a very educative experience, which is terrific
for those who welcome this opportunity to
be enlightened on subjects such as .NET,
Web 2.0, XML, 64 bit computing, Web services,
Microsoft SharePoint, and so on.
The flip side to this, however, is that
very often the discussion of the technology
dominates the presentation of the new features
and runs the risk of getting too technical.
And most attendees, being design rather
than software professionals, would probably
care more about what the applications can
do than about the underlying technologies.
For those who attended both last year's
and this year's BE conferences, the technological
presentations must certainly have come across
as an overdose, as they were both focused
on the XM Edition, which is only just being
released. Perhaps, in future years, Bentley
can re-think its presentation strategy and
tailor its keynote presentations to focus
equally, if not more, on the developments
it has engineered in its products rather
than on the technologies they are based
on.
Bentley's strategy of partnering with technology
leaders such as Adobe, Microsoft, Oracle,
and of late, Google, seems like a smart
one and should help to fortify its position
against its many formidable competitors
in the various industries in which its solutions
are used. In past conferences, these partnerships
have been highlighted by inviting companies
such as Adobe to present their own keynotes
in the opening day's general sessions. This
year, the strong relationship between Bentley
and Microsoft was highlighted in a special
video in the keynote session. You certainly
can't go wrong by partnering with the world's
largest software vendor. At the same time,
technology is advancing so rapidly that
the dominance of Microsoft is no longer
assured. From that perspective, Bentley
users should feel heartened to see it also
working on integrating with technologies
developed by Google, which is doing extremely
well as a company. And of course, who better
to team up with than PDF leader Adobe to
compete effectively against Autodesk's DWF
format?
Talking of Autodesk, I found that the Autodesk-bashing
in the executive keynotes was a little less
than what I have witnessed in the past BE
conferences, but it was there nevertheless.
It mystifying to me why Bentley executives
continue to draw the attention of their
own user base to their competitors! And
it's primarily Autodesk that is targeted,
despite the fact that Bentley has other
competitors like Intergraph and AVEVA in
other verticals such as Plant. Autodesk
came in for considerable flak for changing
the DWG file format once again in the 2007
version, for continuing to keep it closed
and proprietary, and for continuing to push
proprietary formats such as DWF for electronic
publishing instead of the industry-standard
PDF.
While the BE Awards did reflect a lot of
work being done with Bentley solutions,
most of the winners, at least in the Building
vertical, were long-time Bentley users such
as NBBJ (which won awards in two categories),
Arup, Building Design Partnership, and GHAFARI
Associates. Most of these firms have also
won the BE awards in previous years. There
wasn't much evidence of new users, let alone
new users winning awards. This highlights
one of the key challenges before Bentley
as a companyhow to go beyond its existing
user base in the AEC industry and attract
new customers as they start to transition
from CAD-based processes to BIM. In that
respect, continuing to berate Autodesk's
lack of support for openness and interoperability
is not going to have much of an impact.
I have found that most users who are looking
to move to BIM are primarily interested
in a solution that's powerful, intelligent,
and at the same time, easy and intuitive
to use. Bentley solutions have, so far,
not earned high marks for elegance and ease
of use, and it remains to be seen whether
the XM edition provides this much-needed
boost. We will find out in the product reviews
of Bentley's BIM solutions, once their new
XM versions have been released.
Bentley also needs to pay some attention
to the construction side of AEC to develop
BIM solutions for contractors that integrate
with its multi-disciplinary BIM solutions
for architecture and engineering. So far,
there has been no move from Bentley in this
arena, despite the fact that Graphisoft
is already there with its Virtual Construction
solutions (see AECbytes
Newsletter #15) and Autodesk is starting
to move in that direction with the preview
of a quantity take-off solution that it
demonstrated at Autodesk University 2005
(see AECbytes
Newsletter #24). And while the acquisition
of the STAAD and RAM product lines is a
smart move towards integrating design and
analysis, Bentley had no plans yet, as far
as I could discern, to develop or acquire
any other kind of analysis tool for other
critical design aspects such as energy,
egress, and so on. The concept of integrated
engineering is great, but it needs to extend
beyond structural engineering to include
other aspects of building design as well.
Getting back to MicroStation V8 XM Edition,
which was the focus of this year's BE conference,
some of its features such as task-based
modeling and the new PDF integration capability
are truly innovative. However, other new
features such as dialog transparency, organization
of content into a Project Browser, right-click
context menus, and handles for interactive
editing have, by now, become quite common
in other CAD and BIM applications; so, in
that respect, MicroStation is simply playing
catch-up. If Bentley wants to compete more
aggressively with its competitors and try
to capture their market share instead of
simply continuing to upgrade its products
for its existing new base, it needs to ensure
that the list of innovative features in
its next release is much longer than its
catch-up feature list. Perhaps, it might
help to turn to Apple for some inspiration
rather than Microsoft for a change?
About the Author
Lachmi Khemlani is founder and editor of
AECbytes. She has a Ph.D. in Architecture
from UC Berkeley, specializing in intelligent
building modeling, and consults
and writes on AEC technology. She can be
reached at lachmi@aecbytes.com.
If you found this article useful and
have not yet subscribed to AECbytes, please
consider doing so. Subscription
is free, and more subscribers will allow
this publication to provide more of such
content to you.
Features
> BE Conference 2006: Bentley's Annual
User Event > Printer-friendly
format
|