Flux Blog

News, resources, and company updates

Is Your Hardware Startup Idea Worth Building?

Are you creating the right hardware solution for the problem that truly matters? Learn how to validate ideas, prototype fast, and use modern tools to turn concepts into successful products.

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October 30, 2025
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Ultra Librarian joins Flux to Take the Hard out of Hardware

Ultra Librarian joins Flux to Take the Hard out of Hardware

We’re excited to announce our partnership with Ultra Librarian to bring millions of high quality and trustworthy components directly to the Flux ecosystem. This partnership marks a big step towards bringing together all semiconductor manufacturers, distributors, engineers, and the whole hardware industry.

Partnering With Ultra Librarian

Ultra Librarian is the biggest name in the electronic components sector, boasting a repository of millions of parts from diverse manufacturers. Their commitment to maintaining an up-to-date and accessible library for PCB designers aligns perfectly with our goal to offer an efficient, user-friendly design experience. With Ultra Librarian providing access to the world’s largest online electronic component CAD library, Flux users are assured virtually unlimited access to any component they might need, directly published and accessible in real-time within the Flux platform.

Our decision to partner with Ultra Librarian was heavily influenced by the feedback from our community. You want more, high-quality, and trustworthy components available in the Flux library. So, we knew we had to do something big.

Gopu Achath, VP of Technology for Ultra Librarian, emphasizes the importance of fostering this partnership to help drive the industry forward,

“The collaboration between Ultra Librarian and Flux plays a crucial role in the evolution of electronic design. We're enthusiastic about contributing to the dynamic evolution of the CAD design space as Flux endeavors to streamline and digitize the experience. Ultra Librarian continues to lead the charge ensuring CAD models remain easily accessible across various platforms.”

Up First: Monolithic Power Systems

Together with Ultra Librarian, we’re going to be gradually bringing all of Ultra Librarian’s manufacturers into the Flux ecosystem.

We’re starting to roll out the Ultra Librarian partnership with Monolithic Power Systems (MPS), a leader in all things related to power and semiconductors. Users will now have access to over 3,500 of the company’s parts for immediate use in their designs, as well as MPS-created reference designs for inspiration. To use MPS’s parts, simply search for Monolithic Power Systems in the component library and drop them onto your canvas.

Flux library panel showing all open-source and community generated components.

You can also follow MPS’ Organization page to get updates for new components, references designs, and other useful materials. Here are some example MPS reference designs that you can fork in Flux today!

  • MP2338 Reference Design - This project involves designing a power supply circuit using the MP2338GTL step-down converter, featuring various resistors, inductors, and capacitors to regulate and filter the output voltage.
  • MP5048A Reference Design - This project is a reference design for power management using the MP5048A and includes power nets, a variety of passive components, and the MP5920GRT IC for comprehensive control and monitoring.
  • MP2162 Reference Design - A power management circuit featuring the MP2162 from Monolithic Power Systems, incorporating inductors, capacitors, and resistors for

Following MPS, we’ll be bringing on many more of Ultra Librarian’s brands into our tool so users can access the same benefits from their favorite manufacturers.

Benefits to the Flux community

This partnership brings the Flux community unprecedented advantages allowing engineers to interact directly with their favorite manufacturers from their Organization page, including parts, reference designs, and modules.

  • Access to Verified Parts: Direct access to parts uploaded by manufacturers themselves ensures reliability, building trust in the components used for your projects.
  • Streamlined Design Process: With a vast array of components readily available, the need to manually create parts is no more, enabling a smoother design process.
  • Copilot Power Up: The move also provides Flux’s in-tool AI design assistant, Flux Copilot, with access to Ultra Librarian’s parts. Now users can work with Ultra Librarian’s parts in ways not possible anywhere else. This includes leveraging AI to read through datasheets, research, and choose amongst millions of components in the blink of an eye.

A Milestone for Flux, and the Hardware World!

This partnership marks a big step towards bringing together all semiconductor manufacturers, distributors, engineers, and the whole hardware industry. We envision a future where designers and manufacturers can collaborate, where designers can find reliable, high-quality electronic components, and teams can create innovative hardware. This collaboration is a significant step towards that future.

We want to hear from you! What’s the next manufacturer you want to see brought into the Flux Library? Let us know by filling out this survey!

We couldn’t be more excited for what’s ahead!

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March 6, 2024
Never Start from Scratch Again: Introducing the New Project Launcher

Never Start from Scratch Again: Introducing the New Project Launcher

Your team is burning time and money each time a new project begins. At Flux, we’re changing that. The New Project Launcher helps your team improve efficiency by surfacing existing templates which simplify DFM and reduce mistakes. Reduce risk, increase speed, all in a day’s work.

Never Start From Scratch

Your team is burning time and money each time a new project has to start from scratch. The New Project Launcher is changing that by offering a selection of pre-existing templates to choose from every time you start a new project. Templates can be anything created and shared inside of Flux, whether it comes from the Flux community, your favorite manufacturer, or just from within your organization. Here are some of our favorite templates that you’ll have access to from the Launcher to get a faster and more informed start:

  • Reference Designs templates in Flux set the industry standard for quality and ease of use. Dive right into your projects with ready-to-integrate schematics and layouts, or effortlessly transplant elements into your own designs with our seamless copy-paste functionality.
  • Manufacturer design rules templates provide a robust foundation, incorporating specific design rules and stackups from leading PCB manufacturers like JLCPCB, Oshpark, Aisler, SEEED Studio, and PCBWay. These templates offer built-in guardrails to streamline your design process, ensuring compliance and manufacturability from the outset.
  • Part Templates simplify adherence to your organization's standards, ensuring every component you create is consistent and robust right from the start. With templates based on common IPC standards, engineers can quickly initiate designs with confidence, customizing parts as needed—streamlining the path from concept to manufacturable component.
  • Copilot Presets are specialized AI assistants designed for specific sectors, ensuring compliance and accelerating your design process with adaptable, expert-curated assistance.

The New Project Launcher embodies our philosophy of collaboration by making it incredibly simple to leverage the work of peers, experts, and industry leaders. Whether you're seeking inspiration, aiming for compliance with organizational standards, or looking to adopt best practices, these templates guide you toward a successful project from the outset.

For Every Role, A Benefit

No matter who you are, if you’re involved in hardware, you can benefit from the New Project Launcher.

Engineers gain the advantage of speed by starting projects with templates that encapsulate years of expertise and tested designs, directly from manufacturers or seasoned professionals. This means less time deliberating over the basics and more time refining and innovating.

Managers and stakeholders can find value in the distribution of best practices and standards, ensuring their teams operate cohesively, risks are minimized, and projects are propelled forward with proven methodologies. That means less risk of errors and faster times to market.

Manufacturers have the opportunity to amplify their reach and influence by making their reference designs readily available to the community. By driving the adoption of their hardware and simplifying the design-for-manufacture (DFM) process, manufacturers can help the world innovate. Learn more.

Anyone can create and distribute templates easily and limit access for just yourself, your team, or publish to the entire Flux community. Learn more about creating and publishing templates.  

Transforming the Design Landscape

The introduction of the New Project Launcher is part of our commitment to simplifying the design process and reshaping the landscape of hardware design. Ultimately, though, this feature is for you, the builders, the dreamers, and the innovators.

Your engagement and feedback are what drive us forward. We invite you to explore the New Project Launcher, build on the collective wisdom of the Flux community, and contribute your own insights. Together, let's push the boundaries of what's possible in hardware design.

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February 8, 2024
Flux for Enterprise: AI-Driven Hardware Design at Scale

Flux for Enterprise: AI-Driven Hardware Design at Scale

Today, we’re announcing Flux Enterprise, a new plan that allows enterprise hardware teams to leverage AI to iterate faster, streamline processes, mitigate risks, and enhance team efficiency. With Flux Enterprise, we’re finally bringing AI to hardware teams at enterprise companies with Flux Copilot.

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80% of Fortune 500 companies already have employees using AI like ChatGPT for their everyday work and we’ve all seen how LLMs have been leveraged to write code. But, what about designing and building hardware?

We believe LLMs will revolutionize every step of the hardware development process from initial brainstorming all the way through production. From talking with dozens of enterprise customers across the industry, we’ve learned that you are also excited to leverage AI to streamline tedious tasks, access organization-wide knowledge, reduce design risks, and ultimately ship innovative products faster.

We also learned that enterprise customers are concerned about the security aspects of using an AI platform for hardware development. They want enterprise-grade security, privacy, and white-glove onboarding support. That’s why, today, we’re excited to be launching Flux for the Enterprise!

Unlocking AI for Enterprise

With Flux Enterprise, we’re finally bringing AI to hardware teams at enterprise companies with Flux Copilot. What is Flux Copilot? It’s conversational AI that lives in your project to augment your design workflow. Think of it like a senior EE that’s always available for you, 24/7.

What makes Flux Copilot different than generic LLMs like ChatGPT is that it has direct knowledge of your project’s bill of materials, netlist connections, datasheets, engineering knowledge, project requirements, and can even understand images like plots, charts, and technical diagrams - and that’s just the beginning.

Since we launched Copilot last year, it has been used by thousands of hardware teams to build PCBs for everything from industrial IoT to boards used in space! Some of our favorite enterprise use cases for Copilot include:

  • AI Design Reviews: With Flux Enterprise, you can leverage Copilot to reduce design errors by reviewing your project, validating calculations, and double-checking component tolerances and limits. Learn more.
  • AI Datasheet Comprehension: Directly utilize the wealth of data often hidden in the layers of dense technical documents. Learn more.
  • Faster Design Iteration: Copilot can connect complex parts for you, explore design options, and provide a bill of materials for a target project.
  • Find Alternate Parts: Copilot can offer tailored suggestions and analyze tradeoffs based on your project goals, constraints, and specifications.
  • Supply Chain Management: Copilot can research your BOM and use its built-in integration for live part pricing and availability to help manage your project’s supply chain.
  • AI Brainstorming: There are countless ways to brainstorm designs with Copilot, including uploading a block diagram and asking Copilot to recommend specific parts. Learn more.

Whatever your use case may be, there’s no doubt that it can improve your hardware workflow to save your organization time and money.

What’s in Flux Enterprise?

With Flux Enterprise, we’ve taken the power of Flux Copilot and Flux Organizations and optimized them for the needs of the enterprise world. We’re augmenting our tool with white-glove onboarding support and a slew of new, advanced security features including:

  • Guest access controls
  • Network access restrictions
  • Dedicated account managers
  • User provisioning through SCIMs
  • Audit logs
  • SAML single sign-on

We even generate SOC1 and SOC2 type 2 reports annually, so enterprises have transparency into the security measures protecting their work. The Flux Enterprise tier also allows us to support your specific needs.

Let’s revolutionize hardware design together!

We have an ambitious vision for Flux Copilot to unlock the vast human potential that is currently constrained by today’s EDA tools. We’re looking to partner with enterprise customers who are as excited as we are about pushing the boundaries of AI-driven hardware development.

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January 25, 2024
The Future of Flux Copilot

The Future of Flux Copilot

Imagine a future where your most complex PCB design challenges are met with an intelligent AI assistant, capable of handling everything from component selection to compliance checks. Read on to discover how Copilot, embedded within the Flux platform, is turning this vision into a reality, liberating electrical engineers to focus on what truly matters: innovation.

If menial tasks are corroding the magic you once felt building electronics, you are not alone. Aerospace engineers once relied on protractors and books of mathematics tables, and early semiconductor circuits were laid out manually with scalpels and stencils. From computer-aided design to EUV photolithography, new tools opened new frontiers of possibility, letting engineers spend more and more time solving interesting problems instead of doing busywork.

That’s why we built an AI assistant for designing electronics: Flux Copilot. It removes the drudgery for electrical engineers, helps you move faster, and make less mistakes so you can focus on inventing breakthrough products.

What can Flux Copilot do today?

When you open Flux, Copilot is waiting for you in the chat. Brainstorming how to approach a particular PCB design? Struggling to fix a stubborn bug? Just ask, and Copilot will respond instantly with suggestions tailored to your project—you can even ask it to wire up schematics or review a design.  It's not just a tool; it's your design partner.

Under the hood, Copilot coordinates a team of AI models that collaborate to interpret, research, analyze, and respond to your query. When you ask a question, it remembers your chat history, accounts for project requirements, references relevant datasheets, checks parts availability, and vets comparable options before responding. By drawing on this rich context, Copilot manages its array of specialized models and evaluates results in order to generate the best response to your query.

LLMs add a new layer to the top of the software stack—transforming natural language into a programming language so you can communicate with computers in your native tongue instead of code. So the best way to use Copilot is to treat it like a partner: talking through problems, refining questions, and iterating solutions together. More conversation means more context for it to leverage on your behalf.

Copilot is a tireless deputy dedicated to accelerating your creativity. Hobbyists are using it to build side projects. Entrepreneurs are using it to add new lines of business. Teams at Fortune 100s are using it to inform designs and streamline design reviews. But we’re just getting started.

What might be possible in the future?

Imagine you're part of a team that's been tasked with innovating the next generation of wearable health monitors. Stringent design constraints include ultra-low power consumption, medical-grade accuracy, and real-time communication with healthcare providers. A small mistake in component selection could result in a device that fails to meet regulatory standards.

You fire up Flux and initiate a chat with Copilot:

@copilot, we're working on a medical wearable with these specs...

Copilot begins by validating your high-level requirements against current medical standards. Within moments, a list of components that meet your specifications appears on your screen. The AI also generates a basic schematic layout.

Copilot: Based on your specs, here's a rough schematic design with MCU chips, sensors, and power management ICs that fit your criteria. What do you think?

An interactive schematic layout appears on the screen alongside the chat, making it easier for you to visualize the system design. Copilot also estimates the battery life based on the initial schematic and offers to set up notifications for when certain components go on sale or get updated.

Copilot: Looks like our initial Bluetooth choice might consume too much power. How about this low-energy alternative?

The suggestion comes with a recalculated power budget, helping you make an informed decision quickly.

Once the schematic is confirmed, Copilot transitions to creating a basic PCB layout:

Copilot: We're good to go on the schematic. Let's talk PCB layout. I see your mechanical engineering team has constraints for the device enclosure. Shall we coordinate?

You agree, and Copilot generates an initial PCB layout. It also reaches out to your mechanical engineering team to get the constraints for the device enclosure. Within moments, an algorithmically generated 3D enclosure model appears on the screen, designed to perfectly fit your PCB.

Copilot: Here's an auto-generated enclosure that meets the mechanical constraints and fits the PCB layout. How does it look to the team?

After some back-and-forths between your electrical and mechanical teams, facilitated by Copilot, you arrive at a finalized design.

Copilot: Looks like we have a winner! I'll go ahead and run a mock compliance check and notify the firmware team for the final integration.

Fast-forward a few months, and your device is not only meeting but exceeding expectations. Copilot assists in generating the documentation needed for formal compliance checks and eventual mass production.

A J.A.R.V.I.S. for everyone

In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), Tony Stark uses his trusty AI, J.A.R.V.I.S., to build his Iron Man Armor. When Tony has an idea, J.A.R.V.I.S. is always there—relentlessly competent—to transform that idea into reality. J.A.R.V.I.S. understands what Tony needs and taps the relevant resources to make it happen, extending his agency and increasing the leverage of his decisions.

In many ways, J.A.R.V.I.S. represents the kind of AI that Copilot is evolving toward: a tool that empowers you to make anything you can dream up. But in the movies, Tony is a billionaire and J.A.R.V.I.S. is his and his alone, while Copilot is open to everyone, democratizing access to exclusive domains like electrical engineering. Imagine an MCU where everyone has a J.A.R.V.I.S. working tirelessly on their behalf to improve their lives and world. Thanos wouldn’t stand a chance. That is the kind of abundant future we seek to realize.

One day, Copilot will grok your entire supply chain. It will be able to handle any design task you want to delegate. It will accelerate your creativity by making atoms as malleable as bits. That’s how it will earn the J.A.R.V.I.S. analogy. That’s how it will help you build anything you can possibly imagine, making good on Arthur C. Clarke’s injunction that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

So how will you make things better by making better things? We can’t wait to find out.

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October 6, 2023
20+ Amazing Flux Copilot Prompts for Hardware Design

20+ Amazing Flux Copilot Prompts for Hardware Design

We’ve been so amazed with the ways you’ve used Copilot to brainstorm, debug, and conduct part research that we’ve compiled some of our favorite prompts you can copy and paste, or modify for your own use!

What is a Copilot prompt?

Copilot prompts are natural language inputs given to a custom-trained large language model (LLM) specifically designed to understand the principles and methodology of electronics engineering, circuit design, schematic design and PCB design.

For example, if the prompt is

How would I connect ILI9341 and SPI TFT LCD?

Try it now

the model will generate an answer in a human-like manner based on the prompt. And because Copilot lives inside the PCB design tool, not only it provides direct feedback, advice, analysis, and with your approval - it can take action, through a simple chat interface. With just press of a button, Copilot can connect components together.

The future of hardware design is already here with Flux Copilot, offering a new and faster way for hardware engineers to work, making it more fun as well. Learn more about Flux Copilot.

Here are some of our favorite Flux Copilot prompts

Feel free to share your favorites on our Slack Community.

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June 20, 2023
Create Satisfying Schematics with these Updates

Create Satisfying Schematics with these Updates

Discover our latest schematic design updates that streamline wire adjustments, component alignment, and intuitive pin connections, making your design process faster and meeting your high standards for precision. These enhancements, coupled with our AI design assistant, ensure a solid foundation for your projects.

Adjusting Wires is Much Smoother

Traditionally, the process of fine-tuning wire positions on a schematic felt akin to rewriting an entire chapter of a novel for just a few key edits. Crazy!

With Flux, the narrative changes. Enabling the meticulous adjustment of wire positions without the need to start from zero, we've introduced a drag-and-drop feature for individual wire sections. This allows you to artfully navigate around objects, symbols, and components, ensuring that every wire is precisely where it needs to be. 

This image is an animated GIF showing a user interface from the Flux application, a PCB design software for electronics engineers. The animation displays a portion of an electrical schematic in progress with visible component symbols like resistors, LEDs, and interconnecting lines, suggesting the user is constructing or editing an electronic circuit. The left panel, titled 'LIBRARY', lists electronic components like connectors and terminals, indicating that users can select and place these on their schematic. The top-right corner has tabs for 'Schematic', 'Code', and 'PCB', signifying different workspaces within the app. An 'INSPECTOR' panel on the right side displays information about a selected component, including a thumbnail image of the associated PCB design, a brief description indicating it's a battery management system controller board for lithium battery packs, and additional metadata such as creation date, authorship, and tags like 'Automotive'. The overall impression is of a sophisticated and user-friendly tool for designing and managing PCB layouts.

We've also tackled the pesky issue of fragmented line segments—those tiny, unnecessary elbows in your schematic that disrupt the visual flow. Now, parallel wire segments snap and merge into a singular, streamlined line. This eradicates clutter, simplifying your schematic into a model of elegance and simplicity.

💡 Tip: you can also use ctrl/cmd+click to select an entire net at once!

Create Connections at Lightning Speed ⚡

We wanted to make creating connections more intuitive and faster. So we created some new ways to connect components and draw wires that’ll have you working at lightning speed. 

Drag a component onto another component

Now you can connect components simply by dragging them onto one another. Drag a component until one or more of its pins are on top of the pins from another component, then drop it. Instantly, the overlapping pins become connected. You can leave it there, or drag it away to see the wires. For many cases, this could save you two or more clicks, speeding up your workflow.

The image is an animated GIF that displays the interface of the Flux PCB design software. The GIF showcases the user interacting with the schematic workspace of a printed circuit board design. We can see the mouse cursor moving and selecting a vertical array of net labels or pins on the right side of the schematic, suggesting the user is arranging or inspecting the connections of a component. The 'LIBRARY' panel on the left lists various electronic components such as connectors and terminals, indicating a searchable database of parts that can be added to the design. The 'Schematic', 'Code', and 'PCB' tabs at the top suggest the software's capability to switch between different design views and functionalities. The right side of the interface features an 'INSPECTOR' panel, presumably for displaying detailed information about selected components or design elements, although no information is visible in the panel in the provided GIF. The cosmic background continues behind the interface, providing an aesthetic visual theme.

Drag a component over a wire

Connecting components to existing wires is now a breeze. Drag a component until one or more of its pins overlap with the wire, then drop it. Instant connection!

The image is an animated GIF showing the interface of the Flux PCB design software, where a user is interacting with a schematic layout. The cursor is seen connecting lines to various components, likely to establish electrical connections within the circuit design. The labels on the schematic components, such as HSP_MISO and HSP_CLK, indicate the use of high-speed signal pins, while EXT_5V suggests an external 5-volt power supply connection.

On the left side of the screen, the 'LIBRARY' panel is open, displaying a list of components like connectors and terminals that can be added to the schematic. The right side of the screen features an 'INSPECTOR' panel, where a thumbnail of a PCB design, the name BMS 16s60 along with a description labeling it as a battery management system controller board for lithium battery packs, is visible, along with metadata including the creation date, author's name, and tags such as 'Automotive'.

The top of the interface shows tabs labeled 'Schematic', 'Code', and 'PCB', indicating the software's multi-functional capabilities for designing and programming PCBs. The overall animation shows the process of editing a schematic, highlighting the detailed and precise nature of electronic design work. The background behind the software's user interface continues with the cosmic theme, providing an attractive visual continuity.

Drag a wire over a component’s pin

Now you can create connections while adjusting a wire. Drag an existing wire until it overlaps one or many pins of a component, then drop it, and they’ll become connected.

The image is an animated GIF displaying the user interface of the Flux PCB design software, capturing a user's interactions with an electronic schematic. The animation illustrates a cursor that is connecting a series of net labels or pins, outlined in blue, to corresponding components in the schematic, likely mapping out the signal paths or power connections.

The left side of the interface presents the 'LIBRARY' section, showcasing a searchable catalog of electrical components such as connectors and terminals, which users can add to their schematic. On the right, the 'INSPECTOR' section is visible, showing details for a selected component, the BMS 16s60, which is described as a battery management system controller board for lithium battery packs, along with metadata including its creation date, creator's name, and associated tags like 'Automotive'. The thumbnail of the board indicates it's a physical representation of what the schematic will translate into upon completion.

Above, the interface includes tabs for 'Schematic', 'Code', and 'PCB', suggesting the software's comprehensive capabilities for not only designing PCB layouts but also coding and viewing the physical board layout. The background maintains a space-themed aesthetic, providing a visually pleasing backdrop to the technical work. This GIF demonstrates the schematic editing process in a visually engaging and informative way, showing the meticulous process of PCB design.

Draw a wire over multiple pins

You can create many connections effortlessly while drawing a wire. Draw your wire in such a way that it overlaps multiple pins, then finish drawing. All of the pins will now be connected to the wire! This is super helpful if you have an IC, for example, that needs many pins down a line to be connected to the same net.

The animated GIF showcases a user interface of the Flux PCB design software. It illustrates a user actively engaging with an electronic schematic diagram. The mouse pointer is connecting various pins and components, suggesting that the user is in the process of laying out or modifying the circuit connections. On the left, the 'LIBRARY' pane is visible, offering a selection of electronic symbols like terminals, grounds, resistors, and capacitors that can be added to the schematic.

To the right, the 'INSPECTOR' section displays information about a specific component, referred to as BMS 16s60, which appears to be a battery management system controller board for lithium battery packs. This section includes a thumbnail image of the board, the creation date, and additional tags such as 'Automotive', which indicates the sector of application. Metadata, including a link to the component's source, is also provided.

The top of the interface has tabs labeled 'Schematic', 'Code', and 'PCB', indicating the various functions and views available within the software for creating and programming PCBs. The backdrop of the software's interface is a stylized cosmic image, adding an aesthetic appeal to the technical environment. The animation provides insight into the precision and detail involved in the PCB design process within a modern software setting.

Align components perfectly

We’ve also added new alignment and snapping features, which provide visual guides to ensure that all objects on your schematic are nicely aligned. Just drag two objects near each other and, like magic, guidelines appear to help guide the alignment of your components. 

💡 Tip: You can also highlight components and right click and quickly align vertically,  horizontally, or space evenly. 

This animated GIF displays a user interface from the Flux PCB design software, focusing on an electronic schematic diagram. The animation shows a cursor moving across the screen, highlighting the interactive nature of the software. The user is seemingly reviewing or editing the schematic, with various labeled pins and connection points indicating the layout of an electronic circuit.

On the left side, the 'LIBRARY' pane shows a list of components such as connectors and terminals that can be dragged onto the schematic for design purposes. The right side features an 'INSPECTOR' pane, where a component named BMS 16s60 is detailed as a battery management system controller board for lithium battery packs, along with additional information such as the creation date and associated tags (like 'Automotive').

Tabs at the top labeled 'Schematic', 'Code', and 'PCB' indicate the software's capability to provide different design perspectives and functionalities. The space-themed background behind the interface gives a visual flair to the design environment. This GIF captures the intricate process of arranging and connecting electronic components in PCB design software.

Your New Best Friend, Flux Copilot

Your quest for the perfectly aligned, clutter-free schematic isn't just a solo adventure. Flux Copilot shares your, let's say, 'enthusiastic precision.'

With the power of AI at your fingertips, Flux Copilot transforms the art of schematic design into a collaboration with technology. It's not just an assistant; think of it as your detail-obsessed partner in design. Got two components that need a connection? Just whisper sweet nothings (or, you know, actual instructions) to Copilot, and watch it work its magic.

Copilot is here to help you work not just faster or smarter, but at warp speed towards creating that breathtakingly beautiful schematic. Because in the end, a more readable schematic doesn't just mean easier collaboration—it means creating something truly spectacular, together. Sign up for Flux today.

This animated GIF displays the user interface of the Flux PCB design software, focusing on a PCB layout screen. The animation illustrates a cursor moving and placing electronic components onto the black workspace, which represents a printed circuit board. The components, like the one centrally featured resembling a USB port symbol, are rendered in white lines against the dark background, making them stand out distinctly.

On the left, the 'LIBRARY' panel is open, showing various categories of electronic parts, suggesting that the user can search for and select specific items to include in their PCB design. The upper-right section of the interface features an 'INSPECTOR' panel, which seems to offer detailed information about selected objects or components, along with controls for project management.

A project log or chat panel labeled 30 prompts in 30 days indicates an ongoing project or challenge within the application, providing the user with inspiration or guidance for their designs. The background of the interface sports a cosmic theme, maintaining a visually engaging design environment. This GIF captures the moment-to-moment actions of an engineer or designer as they populate a PCB with necessary components using specialized software.

Ready to give Flux’s schematic improvements a try? Start with one of our reference designs today.

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March 14, 2024