What's new in Xpedition 2604
Blog by David Wiens
The world of electronic systems design is evolving at an incredible pace. With increasing complexity, relentless time-to-market pressures, and the ever-present need for robust verification, designers need tools that not only keep up but actively push the boundaries of what’s possible. The Xpedition 2604 release brings a host of enhancements designed to streamline your workflow, improve collaboration, and ensure design integrity from concept to manufacturing.
Key capabilities include:
- General improvements: Harnessing AI and optimizing the user experience
- Systems design: Optimized definition and verification
- Design capture: Performance, adaptabiligy, and enhanced UX
- Library and design management: Consistency and control
- Layout: Precision, collaboration, and manufacturing readiness
- Design verification: Early detection and team collaboration
The Xpedition 2604 update is packed with features designed to empower you with greater efficiency, accuracy, and collaboration throughout your electronic design journey.
The whole blog can be found here.
For more information feel free to contact us.
The world of electronic systems design is evolving at an incredible pace. With increasing complexity, relentless time-to-market pressures, and the ever-present need for robust verification, designers need tools that not only keep up but actively push the boundaries of what’s possible. The Xpedition 2604 release brings a host of enhancements designed to streamline your workflow, improve collaboration, and ensure design integrity from concept to manufacturing.
Seamless Digital ContinuityIn today’s electronics landscape, true digital continuity requires more than just design excellence, it demands tight integration between ECAD and PLM environments. The Siemens synergy between Xpedition EDM and Teamcenter delivers exactly that. This best-in-class integration ensures a fully synchronized flow of library, design, and manufacturing data across the entire product lifecycle, eliminating silos and reducing manual intervention