3Dconnexion conçoit et développe des souris ergonomiques puissantes et des logiciels intelligents basés sur les recherches R&D les plus rigoureuses et innovantes au monde.
Notre gamme de souris 3D SpaceMouse® et CadMouse, et le Keyboard avec Numpad, les produits 3Dconnexion offrent aux professionnels de la CAO un outil supérieur leurs permettant d’interagir avec le monde numérique et d’y en faire l’expérience.
Notre mission est d’offrir la tranquillité d’esprit aux professionnels qui conçoivent les bâtiments, les machines et les produits qui fondent notre monde.
Les ingénieurs prennent leur travail au sérieux, et nous aussi. La technologie et la qualité de construction se combinent pour offrir le niveau de performance que les professionnels exigent – et méritent.
Nos produits, associant performances optimales et confort inégalé, ne cessent de se perfectionner en matière d’ergonomie et de technologie afin d’offrir une sensibilité, une réactivité et un contrôle précis exceptionnels pour une expérience suprême.
3Dconnexion est une entreprise mondiale avec des bureaux en Allemagne, au Japon, à Monaco, en Pologne et aux États-Unis.
Groundbreaking developments tend to begin long before there is a genuine need for them in the marketplace, and innovations are triggered by people who have one thing in common – an idea! But oftentimes, years pass between concept and product.
Computer graphics originated in the 1950s, when the Whirlwind computer was developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), along with a light pen input source which worked directly with a CRT monitor. The first Computer Aided Design (CAD) application using the light pen dates back to 1963 when Ivan E. Sutherland laid the foundation with his doctoral thesis “Sketchpad: A man-machine graphical communication system.”
The computer mouse as an input device also had its beginnings in the early 1960s. Developed under the name “X-Y position indicator for a display system,” it was eventually patented in 1970 based on the principle of two wheels fixed at right-angles to one another.
The more widespread proliferation of the mouse began in 1984 with the Apple Macintosh and the first mainstream graphical user interface to be used with a mouse. Within a year, Logitech began selling the first three-button ball mouse. Shortly thereafter, less expensive, more powerful chips for image processing led to the development of more advanced 2D optical mice.
The history of the 3D mouse started in the late 1970s at the German Aerospace Research Center (DLR), where efforts were made at the Institute for Robotics and Mechatronics to control a robot arm in Cartesian space. In 1981, after lengthy experiments, a six axis force/torque sensor was integrated into a plastic ball. The ball registered the linear and rotational displacements generated by the force and torque of the human hand, which were then computationally transformed into translational and rotational motion speeds.
After further research, DLR introduced a low-cost optical measurement system, using six one-dimensional position detectors. A global patent was granted and in 1993, SpaceMouse®, the world’s first affordable 3D mouse, was launched. The product was marketed under the name Magellan in the US and Asia.
In 1993, a 3D controller was used for the first time on the space shuttle Columbia, manipulating the first robotic arm in space. That same year, 3Dconnexion (later to become a subsidiary of Logitech) was formed and its 3D mouse journey began.
3Dconnexion 3D mice deliver a level of natural and intuitive control of 3D models and environments that is unattainable with a traditional mouse and keyboard. Using a 3D mouse, design engineers and 3D enthusiasts are able to work as if they’re holding the digital model or camera in their hand. Designed for use along with a standard mouse, 3D mice accelerate performance as users no longer have to position models step by step. Using the 3D mouse controller cap, models can be simultaneously panned, zoomed and rotated while the standard mouse is used for selection, creation and editing tasks.
3Dconnexion’s core adaptive micro-precision sensor technology was developed completely in-house with each 3Dconnexion 3D mouse featuring six high performance optical sensors which react to movements in the micrometer range. In addition to constant improvements in sensor technology and device ergonomics, 3Dconnexion works closely with leading software and hardware suppliers to ensure widespread support, integration and adoption of 3D mice in today’s 3D environments.
3Dconnexion is committed to driving design innovation by ensuring an intuitive and natural connection to today’s 3D applications and design environments. This commitment paid off when 3Dconnexion surpassed its two millionth 3D mouse milestone. According to 3Dconnexion, this milestone underscores the widespread adoption of 3D mice in the market, and confirms that an idea can give birth to a product that becomes a fixed part of our lives. And the future looks bright as 3Dconnexion continues to bring the benefits of superior 3D navigation to an ever wider range of software applications and new market opportunities, bound only by the imagination.