A LinkedIn post from Miris highlights the streaming of a highly complex CFM56 jet turbofan 3D model, reportedly around 1 GB in size, directly in a web browser. The post describes full geometric fidelity, real-time lighting, and interactive component exploration without downloads or plugins, using Miris’s adaptive spatial streaming platform and NVIDIA GPU compute from CoreWeave.
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The post suggests Miris is positioning its technology for demanding industrial and aerospace visualization use cases, where large CAD and 3D assets are common. For investors, this could indicate a focus on high-value enterprise markets such as aviation, defense, and advanced manufacturing, where efficient remote visualization can reduce engineering cycle times and support digital-twin workflows.
By referencing NVIDIA GTC and a CoreWeave booth demonstration, the content hints at Miris’s efforts to align with the GPU and cloud compute ecosystem. If such partnerships deepen, Miris could benefit from co-marketing, technical integration, and access to NVIDIA-focused customers, potentially improving its competitive position against other 3D streaming and visualization platforms.
The emphasis on “no compromises” browser-based streaming underscores a potential differentiation in performance and ease of deployment relative to traditional thick-client or plugin-based solutions. For industries with distributed engineering teams and complex assets, this approach may lower IT friction and support scalable SaaS-style deployment models, with implications for recurring revenue and margin profile if adoption grows.
Investors may interpret the public demonstration at NVIDIA GTC as an effort to validate Miris’s technology with a technically sophisticated audience. While the post does not provide customer names, pricing, or revenue details, the focus on a widely recognized aerospace engine model serves as a proof-of-concept that could support future enterprise sales conversations and signal readiness for larger commercial engagements.

