ATICA is a tool which integrates with Capella and builds on MBSE principles. ATICA enhances traceability, reusability, and efficiency—reducing manual errors and effort. Validated in real projects like CORSARIO and evolving under ASCEND to support SysML, ATICA empowers engineers to deliver safer systems faster, even without deep modeling expertise. We want to provide you with a hassle-free way of trying out everything that ATICA has to offer: from FHAs and FTAs to FMEAs and FMEs. All in a model-based environment which keeps all data linked together in models. Out-of-date information, inconsistencies and manual copy-paste of data from one Excel sheet to another are all a thing of the past. So we are excited to announce the release of an ATICA web demo that you can try for free and without any installation, right on your browser.
How to use the ATICA web demo
You can just go to the registration page, create an account and we will provide you with a fresh workspace. There, you can explore everything ATICA has to offer. And you can check the docs for a detailed overview of its capabilities. The demo workspace includes a sample project, but you can create your own, too. You get 30 minutes, but you can extend the duration for another 30 minutes as many times as you want. The demo will notify you when time is about to run out. And when you finish exploring, simply close your browser tab, and that’s it. Do not worry about privacy, everything gets deleted once the session ends. And no one, not even us, can recover the data of the deleted workspace. The project that we include with the demo workspace is the classical Wheel Brake System from ARP4761.
Of course, you can try the demo as many times as you want! With the same email and password used upon registration, you can log back in at the demo homepage. Every time you log in, you will get the same freshly-loaded workspace, ready to go.
What’s under the hood?
The web demo of ATICA is based on open-source software, as is the tool itself. All demos are executed inside containers running on our Linux servers, which come pre-packaged with Capella, the ATICA plugins and our demo project. The in-browser experience is powered by Apache Guacamole, and we created the rest of the website using Flask, a Python framework.
This demo showcases a development version of ATICA, so if you find any issues or opportunities for improvement that you would like to report, please let us know at aticasupport@anzenengineering.com.
I tried it and loved it! What’s next?
Request your own extended demo now, or ask directly at aticasupport@anzenengineering.com and we will promptly reply. We can also guide you and customise your installation on your own devices or servers.
About the author
Fernando Macías is a software engineer with expertise in model-based methodologies, formal methods and software design and implementation.
At Anzen, Fernando’s work focuses on ATICA, our model-based tool for safety analysis. Fernando is in charge of evolving and maintaining ATICA’s functionalities, as well as defining the underlying meta-models used in ATICA and its related projects. He also supervises the deployment of web and on-premises services at Anzen.