
“The goal with Inspire was to create a very user friendly and intuitive product that anyone could figure out how to use without having to do a multi-hour training,” said O’Neal. The difference between Inspire and Spatial Analyzer extends to Inspire’s overall user experience. It's meant to handle something as small as a consumer electronic or as big as a space shuttle.” “Inspire, on the other hand, is a more generalized piece of software. “Spatial Analyzer specializes in large part inspection – things like an aircraft, or a power plant, or a naval vessel,” said O’Neal. Given its multi-decade presence in the market, Hexagon offers several different metrology solutions, including its original measurement product – Spatial Analyzer – as well as a newer product, Inspire. “That’s the promise of effective metrology.” “If you can capture real-world quality data for measurement, positioning and inspection, you can gain actionable insights to make manufacturing processes smarter,” said Dave O’Neal, Product Manager at Hexagon MI.

Hexagon’s Manufacturing Intelligence division – one of the major units within the company – provides solutions that use data from design and engineering, production, and metrology to make manufacturing smarter.


With approximately 22,000 employees across 50 countries, Hexagon is a global leader in sensor, software, and autonomous solutions.
