#062 - How a hardware SaaS company wants to help you not get lost in your data during product development, with Michael Corr of Duro Labs, USA
Sep 26, 2018
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Michael Corr, co-founder and CEO of Duro Labs, discusses how their cloud-based product helps hardware companies avoid miscommunication, track data, and maintain consistency in product development. They address the limitations of tools like email and spreadsheets, as well as the importance of revision control, differentiation in hardware development, and the challenges of managing cultural differences in high-tech projects.
Removing human involvement from certain processes can speed up hardware development and reduce mistakes.
Duro Labs offers a cloud-based SaaS solution to help hardware companies manage their product workflow and ensure accurate data entry and validation.
Deep dives
The Importance of Removing the Human in the Loop
The podcast episode emphasizes the importance of removing humans from certain processes, as the cost and impact of mistakes can be significant. The goal is to speed up these processes by removing human involvement. This is particularly relevant in the field of hardware product development, where innovation and the convergence of different disciplines are key. The episode explores challenges faced in hardware development, such as miscommunication between design and manufacturing teams and inconsistent data management. The speaker also highlights roadblocks in agile hardware development and the lack of revision control in CAD design, drawing parallels to the software industry's use of Git for version control.
Solving Data Management Challenges in Hardware Development
The podcast episode discusses the challenges faced in managing data in hardware product development. Traditional tools like email and spreadsheets are still commonly used, leading to miscommunication, inaccuracies, and inefficiencies. The episode introduces Duro Labs, a cloud-based software-as-a-service (SaaS) solution designed to help hardware companies manage their product workflow, from prototype to production. Duro aims to simplify the data entry and validation process, ensuring that bill of materials and supply chain data are correct and complete. By automating tasks and enforcing hardware industry standards, Duro helps teams bring their products to market on time and on budget.
The Need for Improved Mass Production Capabilities
The podcast episode highlights the ongoing need for improved mass production capabilities in the hardware industry. While prototyping has become more accessible and agile, mass production processes haven't kept pace. This creates inefficiencies and risks, even for established companies. The episode suggests that reducing lead times in manufacturing, similar to what 3D printing has achieved in prototyping, is crucial for unlocking the full potential of the hardware industry. Streamlining production processes, reducing errors, and implementing better testing and quality control measures are seen as vital for overcoming barriers and achieving true agility in the hardware development process.
The Benefits of Version Control in Hardware Design
The podcast episode touches on the lack of effective version control practices in hardware design, contrasting it with the prevalent use of Git in software development. The speaker expresses surprise at the limited adoption of version management tools in hardware design, despite the parallels and benefits of such practices. The episode explores the challenges faced in managing CAD files and highlights the potential reasons for the lack of version control, such as the proprietary and binary nature of hardware design files. The episode emphasizes the importance of implementing version control in hardware design to ensure accurate and synchronized product development across teams.
I had Michael Corr as guest, who is the co-founder and CEO of Duro Labs from LA, southern California. I already had a guest from LA in episode 25, Shaun Arora of Make in LA, the hardware accelerator. Michael is also in a way supporting the hardware ecosystem, but he’s not from an accelerator. He’s helping hardware companies with their developments and he has a product for it.
His product is at the interface between software and hardware. He’s been deep in hardware development, designing and manufacturing all kinds of hardware products for more than 15 years both in the US and outside. Hardware products he has designed range from drones, IoT devices, wearables, telecom equipment, cleantech. His team is coming out now with a cloud-based product.
Many talk enthusiastically about digital manufacturing and that there’s a renaissance in manufacturing, but actually still too many use such “sophisticated” tools as email or simple spreadsheets. How do you avoid miscommunication between teams in design, in manufacturing, inside and outside your organisation? How do you make sure you can keep track of all the data you produce during your development without people working with inconsistent versions of your database? How do you circumvent getting inaccurate data, spec sheets, part numbers, drawings into your design? These are all some of the questions he addresses in this interview. Beyond these, we also talked about other pressing issues for agile hardware development a reality or why we don’t have revision control in CAD design similar to how it exists in software development with git repository.
The solution to a common pain point across various endeavors in designing and manufacturing hardware [4:30]
Who can benefit from Duro and the variety of problems it can solve that differentiate it on the market [8:12]
What some of the most used management tools cannot give to today’s engineers that Duro can [16:23]
How the gap between prototyping and mass production stage is slowing down the hardware industry in its struggle to catch up with the software industry [20:25]
State of agile development and which companies are making progress in this respect [27:24]
Stages of the hardware development where agile will have the most impact [35:12]
Why version management tools aren’t common in hardware development [42:12]
If you could go back in time in your 20s, what notes would you give yourself? [46:06]
If you had to name a book, which one had the biggest impact on your entrepreneurial career? [47:43]
Why and when to be process-oriented [48:49]
Being in different worlds for development and its challenges [51:08]
What is the best way to reach Michael? [53:28]
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