Altium Webinar: July 24th
In case you missed our Altium Designer® live webinar, no worries. You can catch up here with the video recording and presentation slides. If you’re not a fan of videos I’ll try my best to summarize in the webinar notes below. Most of the key takeaways will be the same as the may webinar but do take a look at the questions as they’ll be different. For future webinars, if there’s something you’d like to see add it to the comments.
Multithreading allows Altium Designer to parse out different tasks to different cores making it much quicker. Multi-threading is used for tasks that can be run in parallel. It's great for things like polygon pours, gerber generation, and DRC checks, things that do not have to be calculated sequentially. It's to be noted that smaller, simple designs will probably not notice a difference in performance but users that work with larger, more complex designs will.
Now that Altium Designer is 64 bit, it's able to utilize much more memory than its predecessors, giving the user a faster and smoother design experience.
Certain tasks in the software have been completely rewritten to be much more efficient. Examples of this would be gerber generation and net building. Our R&D team went through and reduced the amount of calculations Altium Designer needed to do to complete a task without losing any data. They’re pretty clever.
The interactive properties panel provides universal editing access to the properties of documents and objects in design editors. The panel changes its content based on the document or object that is currently selected and presents specific properties and settings that relate to that document/object. For example, if you click on a component in the schematic the properties panel will show the designator, description as well as parameters and pin information. And when in the PCB the properties panel will show similar information just slightly geared for PCB. The properties panel is a work in progress and will continue to improve.
The view configuration panel is used to configure what is currently displayed in the workspace and how it is displayed. This includes layer visibility and color, object visibility and transparency, masking and dimming levels, the current single layer mode, and a number of additional workspace display features, such as the display of net names on pads, vias, and tracks. This is a work in progress and will continue to improve.
Altium Designer introduces a true system-level design that connects both logical system design and the physical board assembly. In the Multi-board schematic environment is where one is able to logically connect the separate board modules together. Once connected use the connection manager to manage the connectivity across designs.
Within the multi-board assembly environment one is able to physically connect the separate PCBs in 3D space. The multi-board environment also has 3D collision checking to make sure everything fits perfectly. And if a change needs to be made to make a components placement, changes can be pushed to the child PCB.
The BOM document is an important document that should be an integral part of the design process, not an afterthought. ActiveBOM® supplies designers with information so that they can make informed decisions when it comes to choosing suppliers and components. The BOM document in Altium Designer displays real-time supplier and part information, the ability to rank suppliers, and also checks to help make sure that the BOM document is accurate and ready to be sent out.
Q: Is ActiveBOM included with Altium Designer?
A: Yes. ActiveBOM, multiboard design, and Draftsman® are all included with Altium Designer
Q: Where does ActiveBOM get its supplier information from?
A: Altium Designer works very closely with Octopart® and with suppliers/distributors to get data directly from the source.
Q: Does ActiveBOM sync with SnapEDA?
A: SnapEDA has developed a plugin which connects to Altium Designer. This is something that SnapEDA has developed and I am unaware of their capabilities and future plans.
Q: Do the Altium Signal Integrity tools work with multiboard?
A: No, not at this time. Multiboard is still young and we are constantly developing and improving.
Q: Can ActiveBOM be customized with additional columns for my needs?
A: Yes. ActiveBOM can be fully customized to add almost any information you need.
Q: Can you view how net is promoted through multiple boards while using multiboard?
A: Yes. While in the multiboard you are able to select and highlight nets on the multiboard assembly, displaying how the net travels through the different boards.
To do this, open the Multiboard Assembly panel while in the multiboard assembly workspace/document (.MbaDoc). Expand the PCB doc until you see the Nets folder. From there you are able to select one or multiple nets on your board.