After many years of being solely available under proprietary licensing from TGS (now
FEI), Inventor was released under the
LGPL open source license in August 2000 and is available from SGI. Around the same time, the
Coin3D API clone library was released by SIM (Systems in Motion). SIM was later acquired by the Kongsberg group and renamed
Kongsberg SIM. The Coin library had been written in a
clean-room fashion from scratch, sharing no code with the original SGI Inventor library but implementing the same API for compatibility reasons. Kongsberg ended development of Coin3D in 2011, and released the code under the BSD 3-clause license. The open-source version from SGI is not maintained, and SGI has not indicated a commitment to further develop the library. The open-source release is used in MeVisLab (MeVis Medical Solutions AG and Fraunhofer MEVIS), however, and development of that continues. Thermo Scientific Open Inventor is still being developed, and has added a number of improvements to the original Inventor API for
medical imaging,
medical image computing, 3D
reflection seismology, and
petroleum reservoir modeling. The Open Inventor API is still commonly used for a wide range of scientific and engineering visualization systems around the world for the development of complex 3D application software. TGS was acquired by Mercury Computer Systems in 2004. It became an independent company,
Visualization Sciences Group (VSG), in June 2009. In 2012, VSG was acquired by FEI Company. FEI Company was acquired in 2016 by the
Thermo Fisher Scientific Materials & Structural Analysis Division, which continues to develop (and support) Open Inventor. == References ==