
Contributed
Data analytics company SAS Institute is now using technology from the video game maker Epic Games to make “digital twins” for its customers.
It’s the first time that Cary’s two largest tech firms, led by the state’s two richest residents, have ever publicly partnered together on a project.
The news came at SAS’s annual innovation conference, which has placed a heavy emphasis on the addition of artificial intelligence tools as the company ramps up for a potential initial public offering.
Digital twins are virtual recreations of physical objects that SAS said its customers can use to glean real-world data and forecast how new systems could operate.
- The twins are made using Epic’s Unreal Engine, a powerful visualization tool that has been used in everything from its “Fortnite” video game to television shows like “The Mandalorian.”
- Epic Games uses an app it created called RealityScan to take photos of a real-world space and then import into its Unreal Engine, transferring a one-to-one 3D replica inside the visualization engine.
- SAS’s analytics tools can then hook up to the engine and take data from whatever simulation its customer wishes to run.
- Georgia-Pacific is asking SAS to simulate multiple scenarios of how new automated guided vehicles could impact the operations of its paper mill and is taking data from the virtual simulations before implementing them in the real world.