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Virtual reality tfUS_S-Cgsi
It's like Nascor meets Nintendo. Engineered wood component makers, retailers and architects can now design trusses with software featuring the sanne stunningly realistic displays used by the video game industry.
Tee-Lok Layout I software is, according to Frank Powers, national sales manager, Tee-Lok Corp., Fdenton, N.C., "the first system to be 3-D all the time. You don't just view it in 3-D, you work in 3-D. Objects have realistic-looking thickness and lighting. making for easy understanding of even the most complex framing systems."
Drag and drop features make once-difficult tasks easy. "Smart Screen Technology" speeds up inpuf by eliminating the hunt for toolbar icons.
Multi-level buildings are no problem, since roof and floor sys- tems are combined in a single layout. Working in 3-D faoilitates proper alignment of structural items from level to level. fD AILROAD mergers, an evolving I\timber base and other changes in forest products distribution have also altered reloaders' roles as customers expect new services.
Inputting complex hip systems or lastminute layout modifications also are reportedly easier than ever. ll In addition, the sofJware.can split the display screen into multi. ple work areas, each with a different view and different visual characteristics, such as see-through exterior walls and solid interior walls*and all active.
Reloads are not just brokers of transportation. Transloaders own, lease and operate warehouses, lift trucks and tractor-trailers, or contract for their use. Many transloaders participate in seamless, single factor, joint-through freight rates, which may or may not include transloading charges bundled as a division of the through revenue. Transloaders may also inventory and store merchandise at rest or in transit. caring for merchandise of the shipper, receiver or beneficial owner of the goods.
Reloads can lower costs from mill to retailer by reducing handling by middlemen and distributors, decreasing transportation costs and time and
