Altia Provides Major Surgical Device Maker with Turnkey Design, Saving Time and Resources

“This is what this product always wanted to look like!”

—Device Maker

For over 125 years, a division of one of the world’s largest medical products companies has been meeting the needs of surgical hospitals with innovative products. Today, assisted by the tools and services provided by Altia, it continues to lead the profession in the design and manufacture of medical devices that guide surgeons and their teams through highly complex procedures.

A Search for Solutions

Recently the manufacturer was designing an upgrade for one of its most successful camera-driven surgical visualization systems. Executing a new GUI (Graphic User Interface), however, was proving to be problematic due to the limitations of the design software recommended by a sister division. According to the senior principal software engineer on the project, the time crunch for development, combined with the difficulties using the recommended software, compelled him to try an alternative package – Altia GUI development software.

“We had licenses for Altia Design and Altia DeepScreen available to us through our company, so we gave it a try. It quickly became clear that it was superior to the software given to us by our sister division,” he said.

The device manufacturer was still constrained by engineering resources. “That’s when Altia asked, ‘How about if our services team steps in to help you meet your first design milestone?”

As Jeff Stewart, Altia’s Director of Field Application Engineering, recalled, there was a pause on the other end of the line.

“He said, ‘Really? You could just build it for me turnkey?’ I told him we could, and that’s where things went.”

Altia Earns Customer Trust

Stewart arranged a first meeting with Altia’s Professional Engineering Services Group. The customer explained that the existing monochrome GUI had been hand-coded internally and was becoming difficult to maintain. Any upgrade would have to run on the product’s existing Linux platform. Together, the two companies began working on how the new interface would function.

“From the beginning we had a good relationship,” noted Brett Stein, Vice President of Engineering Services. “The customer had its software lead, design lead and one of their senior software engineers on every call. We had our project and tech lead and probably several other engineers on each of those calls as well. When everyone collaborates on a regular basis, good things result.”

Once Altia met the first milestone, the customer recognized the value of collaborating with Altia’s team on this project  time-savings, expertise, overall quality of the interface and more. They asked Altia Services to complete the rest of the project. Backed by this team of UI experts, the customer realized they could deliver far beyond their initial plan. Therefore, they began to expand on what was initially intended to be only five screens to include fresh ideas and feature improvements not initially planned for the product.

“The final program involved nearly 50 screens in all,” Stein stated. “It included draggable, scrollable lists and menus. The GUI is designed to look and feel like a smartphone interface while running on a very low power platform. Our team is well-versed in this kind of work. In fact, this is what our company is known for in a variety of industries. So, while it was a challenge, the project progressed well.”

For any medical instrument, the UX has to be right. “The position of buttons and controls has to be intuitive,” continued Stein. “Operators can’t afford to make a wrong choice, especially with gloved fingers. The visual layout must also communicate instantly, so technicians are making the right choice every time.”

“The GUI is designed to look and feel like a smartphone interface while running on a very low power platform. Our team is well-versed in this kind of work. In fact, this is what our company is known for in a variety of industries. So, while it was a challenge, the project progressed well.”

Brett Stein, Vice President of Engineering Services

The manufacturer’s principal engineer recalled how Altia even advised on language support. “One of Altia’s services team is a native Chinese language speaker. She told us, ‘I believe some of your existing translations are wrong.’ It turned out she was correct, so we fixed them.” He continued, “That was really cool, as it’s not the norm to have that level of collaboration when we do business with other vendors.”

The trust and transparency Altia earned went a long way, in the engineer’s mind. “I have a very junior associate, straight out of college, working with me on the software. Because of the comfort level I felt with Altia, I was able to let him be the liaison with Altia’s services team. I would not have had that confidence if it were some other supplier I didn’t trust.”

On Budget, Ahead of Schedule

Despite the aggressive timeline, Altia was able to complete the revamp of the original monochrome GUI with an updated, full color and highly intuitive design. The end product was not only more advanced, but on budget and ahead of schedule. Furthermore, due to Altia’s ability to generate code for the device’s microprocessor target directly from the design using Altia DeepScreen, the GUI worked correctly the first time, without refinements.

“We showed how fast and efficient we could be. In the past the customer would outsource software and they would spend months reworking what they got back,” said Stewart. “What they got from us was a functional product.”

The customer noted that Altia allowed them to effectively extend their internal resources for this project. “Our engineering team has a lot on its plate. Altia gave us extra productivity without extra head count,” the principal engineer stated. “We were able to concentrate on the business logic while gaining a polished user experience.”

Altia’s Engineering Services Group enabled the customer to complete its GUI in half the time that its sister division was investing in a GUI for a similar product. Now, that sister division is interested in Altia as well.

“ Our engineering team has a lot on its plate. Altia gave us extra productivity without extra head count,” the principal engineer stated. “We were able to concentrate on the business logic while gaining a polished user experience.”

“I felt I was working with a team just down the hallway,” said the manufacturer’s senior principal software engineer. “This is the kind of relationship we look for. Our users are thrilled. With Altia’s help, this is what this product always wanted to look like.”

Hyundai Uses Altia Design Tools on New-Generation Kia Sportage

Easy-to-Use Altia HMI Design and Development Environment Gives Automaker Freedom to Innovate

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The Customer

Hyundai Kia Motor Company, one of the world’s leading automotive OEMs, recently began using Altia Design, Altia’s HMI design/editing package, and DeepScreen, Altia’s code generator. Hyundai now uses the Altia platform to accelerate development of all its 4.2-inch instrument clusters, including the designs in its newest Kia mid-size SUV—the Kia Sportage.

 

Full Design Control

Ensuring the integrity of cluster design concepts is what drew Hyundai to Altia. With Altia Design, they can design, test and specify instrument cluster ideas within their own design studio. This enables the OEM to remove developmental steps with outside Tier One suppliers and shorten their design timelines. Moreover, Hyundai’s partners can use the Altia-generated code in their implementation. With Altia Design, Hyundai can maintain their design vision all the way to the final product.

Altia Design, Altia’s full-feature UI design, simulation and model integration environment, allows users to quickly build and iterate high-fidelity, functionally complete prototypes and GUIs. Users can describe animation, stimulus and behavior without programming; furthermore, they can import, create and control objects from third-party environments. 

Once specified in Altia Design, Hyundai’s concepts go directly into DeepScreen, Altia’s code generator, to generate production-grade code that is deployable onto the selected hardware platform. The result is hardened software that a Tier One can directly use in a final production implementation.

Hyundai enjoys multiple benefits from Altia’s software. Because they own the implementation, the OEM has control over pricing. On the creative side, Hyundai’s instrumentation team likes the ability to do designs without relying on writing code. 

“Automotive design professionals come from a mixture of disciplines. Some are more comfortable with the graphics side, which others are more software-focused,” commented Michael Hill, Altia Vice President of Engineering. “So, the ability for everyone to sit at the same table and use Altia Design to come up with a solution is incredibly valuable.”

The ability for everyone to sit at the same table and use Altia Design to come up with a solution is incredibly valuable.

- Michael Hill, Altia Vice President of Engineering

Testing Proves Altia Performance

Before committing to Altia’s platforms, Hyundai did a performance test on the products.

“We were tasked with showing we could run a certain graphics type on near-production hardware, and that we could deliver the same performance or better,” noted Hill. “Next we had to show that our generated code was of a certain size. Finally, we had to meet certain speed and footprint parameters.” Subsequent analysis showed that Altia DeepScreen, working in tandem with Altia Design, exceeded the performance requirements.

Efficiency for the Future

As OEMs know, design cycles for cluster components can be extensive. Altia Design and DeepScreen have significantly shortened Hyundai’s design-to-handoff cycle with their Tier One partners and, perhaps even more importantly, their ability to deploy innovative graphics in their instrument clusters on hardware requiring lower power consumption.

Hyundai is now able to define every aspect of their 4.2-inch cluster designs, from concept through bill of materials, on models such as the new Kia Sportage.
“Altia software has helped OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers all over the world to streamline their collaboration and development processes,” said Hill. “The ease-of-use and strong feature set available with Altia’s products have enabled companies like Hyundai and many more to define their vehicle HMI solutions more fully and implement those solutions dependably.”

Ssangyong Uses Altia Software to Deploy Embedded Displays for Rexton SUV and Trucks

Easy-to-Use Altia HMI Design and Development Environment Gives OEM New Freedom to Innovate

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The Customer

Global automotive companies understand how important vision is to vehicle design. It is a major challenge, in such a complex industry, to maintain a designer’s original vision through the hundreds of steps between concept and final product. Their success in overcoming these obstacles, in partnership with Altia, is a transformative step for them. Other OEMs across the automotive industry can benefit from following a similar path.

Full Design Control

Altia Design, Altia’s full-featured user interface design, simulation and model integration environment, allows users to quickly build and iterate high-fidelity, functionally complete prototypes and graphical user interfaces (GUI) models. Users can describe animation, stimulus and behavior without programming. Furthermore, they can import, create and control objects from third-party environments.  

Once specified in Altia Design, Ssangyong’s concepts go directly into DeepScreen, Altia’s code generator, to automatically generate production-grade code that is deployable onto their selected hardware platform. The result is hardened software that a Tier One can directly use in a final production implementation. 

Ssangyong enjoys multiple benefits from Altia’s software. Because they own the implementation, the OEM has control over pricing and the branded look and feel of their HMIs. On the creative side, Ssangyong’s instrumentation team likes the ability to design without relying on writing code.  

Testing Proves Altia Performance

Before committing to Altia’s platforms, Ssangyong did a performance test on the products.  

“We were tasked with showing we could run a specified graphics set on near-production hardware, and that we could deliver the same performance or better,” noted Michael Hill, Altia Vice President of Engineering. “Next we had to show that our generated code was of a certain size. Finally, we had to meet a series of speed and footprint parameters.” Subsequent analysis showed that Altia’s solution—Altia Design and DeepScreen—exceeded the customer’s performance requirements.

Efficiency for the Future

As OEMs know, design cycles for cluster components can be extensive. Altia Design and DeepScreen have significantly shortened Ssangyong’s design-to-handoff cycle with their Tier One partners. Perhaps even more importantly, Altia’s software has improved their capability to deploy innovative graphics in their instrument clusters on hardware requiring lower power consumption. 

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