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Sign up free →Delta, a power management company, demonstrated DIATwin — software built on NVIDIA Omniverse (a 3D simulation platform) — running on its own factory floor at Hannover Messe 2026, a major industrial technology conference. The system creates a digital replica of physical production lines and now pulls live data from actual machines to train and improve the AI models.
Instead of factories running simulations separately from real operations, DIATwin closes the loop: what the AI learns from a digital twin gets tested immediately on the real factory floor, and performance data flows back in. This cuts the gap between theory and practice, so manufacturers can deploy automation changes faster and with fewer mistakes.
Factory managers and production engineers can now test layout changes, equipment upgrades, or scheduling shifts in the digital twin before committing to physical changes — reducing downtime and failed experiments. For companies running multiple plants, this shortens the time needed to roll out new processes across sites.
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