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Scilab Enterprises

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Scilab Enterprises
NameScilab Enterprises
IndustrySoftware
Founded2000s
HeadquartersParis, France
ProductsScilab, Xcos, gateways
Key people--

Scilab Enterprises is a private software organization associated with numerical computing and open-source scientific software. The organization has been linked to the development and dissemination of the Scilab software environment and related tools. It has interacted with academic institutions and technology firms across Europe and internationally.

History

Scilab Enterprises emerged from research initiatives connected to INRIA, École Polytechnique, Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, Université Paris Diderot, and Université Pierre et Marie Curie during the late 1990s and early 2000s, alongside collaborations with industrial partners such as EDF (Électricité de France), Thales Group, Airbus, Dassault Aviation, and Schneider Electric. Its formation was influenced by projects and funding mechanisms from French Ministry of Higher Education and Research, European Commission, Horizon 2020, FP6 (Framework Programme 6), and ANR (Agence nationale de la recherche). Early development incorporated contributions from researchers affiliated with Laboratoire d'Analyse et d'Architecture des Systèmes, Lab-STICC, LIP6, LRI, and CEA. Over time the organization interacted with entities like Microsoft Research, IBM Research, Google Research, Intel Labs, Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Red Hat through compatibility, benchmarking, or integration efforts.

Products and Services

Scilab Enterprises provided offerings that complemented the core Scilab (software) environment, including consulting for Numerical analysis applications used by Thales, Airbus Defence and Space, Safran, Alstom, and TotalEnergies clients. The portfolio included support for Xcos, toolboxes interoperable with MATLAB, adapters for Simulink, and deployment services targeting Linux, Windows, and macOS platforms, with integration pathways for Docker, Kubernetes, OpenStack, and Amazon Web Services. Commercial services extended to training for users from École Centrale Paris, INSA Lyon, ENS Rennes, and Université Grenoble Alpes as well as bespoke development contracts with Siemens, Bosch, Hitachi, and Sony. Additional products emphasized interoperability with Python (programming language), R (programming language), Julia (programming language), and data formats used by MATLAB, HDF5, NetCDF, and JSON tooling ecosystems.

Technology and Contributions

Technically, the organization advanced numerical libraries, solvers, and visualization modules used in scientific computing workflows alongside projects like Scilab宇宙 and community toolboxes. Contributions included work on linear algebra routines connecting to BLAS, LAPACK, ARPACK, and SuiteSparse and interfaces for OpenMP, MPI, CUDA, and OpenCL for acceleration on NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel hardware. The group participated in standards and interoperability dialogues involving ISO/IEC JTC 1, IEEE, W3C, and The Open Group, and engaged with reproducible research initiatives associated with Zenodo, GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket. Academic collaborations produced joint outputs presented at venues such as ICML, NeurIPS, ICLR, SIGGRAPH, Eurosys, ISC High Performance, and Supercomputing Conference. Patents and open-source contributions referenced practices from GNU Project, Free Software Foundation, Apache Software Foundation, OSI (Open Source Initiative), and licensing models influenced by GNU General Public License, LGPL, and MIT License.

Corporate Structure and Ownership

The corporate structure combined private ownership, venture-style investment discussions, and nonprofit collaboration models, engaging stakeholders from Bpifrance, European Investment Bank, AXA, and private investors with ties to Partech Partners and Elaia Partners. Governance practices mirrored those in companies interacting with INRIA Transfert, SATT (Sociétés d'accélération du transfert de technologies), and university spin-offs like Genopole launches. Board-level advisors often hailed from research institutes such as Collège de France, Ecole Normale Supérieure, and advisory networks linked to French Tech and La French Tech initiatives.

Funding and Partnerships

Funding sources combined competitive grants from European Research Council, H2020, Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions, and national programs with commercial contracts from Airbus Group, Thales Group, Renault, PSA Group, and Veolia. Strategic partnerships included integrations and alliances with MathWorks, Wolfram Research, Maplesoft, SageMath, Octave, Scipy, and NumPy projects, as well as certification or compliance collaborations with AFNOR, ISO, and regional innovation clusters like Cap Digital and Systematic Paris-Region.

Community and Ecosystem

The community around the software involved contributors from GitHub, SourceForge, Bitbucket, academic labs at ETH Zurich, MIT, Stanford University, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, University of California, Berkeley, Princeton University, Harvard University, Columbia University, Imperial College London, TU Berlin, KU Leuven, University of Toronto, McGill University, University of Melbourne, and user groups in cities like Paris, London, Berlin, Madrid, Milan, Zurich, Geneva, Brussels, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Oslo, Helsinki, Dublin, Lisbon, Barcelona, Bordeaux, Lyon, Toulouse, and Nice. Community events included workshops at FOSDEM, EuroPython, PyCon, SciPy, JupyterCon, OpenStack Summit, and regional hackathons backed by incubators such as Station F and accelerators including Numa Paris and Techstars.

Category:Software companies of France