Tech

A search engine for shapes

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Born and raised in Shanghai, Tan came to MIT to study high-energy astrophysics and wrote his dissertation on computational modeling of neutron stars. “Coming from China at that time, I had very little experience with computers,” he says. “I was fortunate to find many helpful students during my time there.” Tan also met his wife, Hong (Zhang) Tan, SM ’88, PhD ’96, at MIT. The pair were married in the MIT Chapel and today have two sons.

Tan struggled to find work in astrophysics after graduation and soon shifted toward industry. At his first job, he helped a defense contractor develop a computer simulation of the first Gulf War for a US military training program. “I was able to make that shift because of the training I received at MIT modeling neutron stars,” he says. “I learned a method. And I understood that method could be applied to other fields.”

Tan and Nainesh Rathod cofounded Imaginestics, an Indiana-based consultancy, in 2002 and soon counted many industrial and defense contractors as clients. In their spare time, they worked sporadically on a technique to locate 3D models using geometric search criteria. The company launched VizSeek in 2015. Since then, it has deployed this software to develop a 3D printing and project management system for the US Air Force, a solution to eliminate redundant parts for Ingalls Shipbuilding (a leading producer of ships for the US Navy), and a quoting system for a contract manufacturer that increased its efficiency 40% over 14 months. Imaginestics has tripled its customer base since 2016.

“Originally, we just thought of VizSeek as an interesting project,” recalls Tan. “It turned out that it filled an enormous demand in industry we didn’t know existed. So much of manufacturing is redundant. You can be a lot leaner as a company if you eliminate that redundancy.”

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