Tag Archives: the technology used to make this happen is a moving target.

A Norxe projector sits on a wooden table in a test environment aimed at a calibration screen displaying color bars and grid lines. In front of the screen is a green measurement antenna setup, likely for electromagnetic or optical testing. The walls are lined with evenly spaced white acoustic or RF absorption panels.

Read about RSi Visuals’ and Norxe’s effort to offer materiel solutions to high-risk training enterprises.

RSi and Norxe provide another instance of a collaborative effort to offer materiel solutions to high-risk training enterprises. Whereas RSi’s business portfolio has an approximate 50%-50% split between the military and commercial aviation training sectors, similarly, Norxe’s projectors are in service at training sites in both markets and in other sectors.  

A BBC News segment shows a high-tech driver-in-the-loop simulator with a cockpit mounted on a motion platform, placed in front of a large curved screen displaying a virtual highway environment. A red BBC News banner at the bottom reads: “Driver-in-the-loop simulators for testing cars,” with the website link bbc.co.uk/news.

BBC News looks to our partner, Ansible Motion, to see how simulators provide a tool for car companies to develop new vehicles and conduct testing.

BBC News looks to our partner, Ansible Motion, to see how simulators provide a tool for car companies to develop new vehicles and conduct testing.

Ansible Motion DIL simulator cross-product compatibility

Learn how static and dynamic Ansible Motion Driver-in-the-Loop (DIL) simulator products work together seamlessly to support vehicle product development workflows.

Can driving simulators reflect reality?

Driving simulators have always attempted to connect real people with imaginary vehicles. The fundamental principle is not new; however, the technology used to make this happen is a moving target. Read Ansible Motions article about: Can driving simulators reflect reality?