Proteus Engineering Aio- Fastship- Maestro- Rhinomarine -jf- May 2026

For the naval architect, this stack means fewer meetings and more knots. For the shipyard, it means fewer welding errors and faster delivery. And for the vessel itself, it means a design that is not just drawn, but evolved .

Enter and its ambitious AIO (All-In-One) philosophy. The acronyms attached to it— FastShip, Maestro, RhinoMarine, JF- —are not just software modules. They are instruments in an orchestra that Proteus is attempting to conduct toward a single, harmonious crescendo: the truly digital shipyard. FastShip: The Art of the Possible At the front end of the pipeline sits FastShip . For decades, hull design was a compromise between what was beautiful and what could be calculated. FastShip obliterates that compromise. It is a surface modeling environment built not for visual aesthetics alone, but for performance . Using proprietary parametric technologies, FastShip allows engineers to manipulate a vessel’s hull form while simultaneously receiving real-time feedback on hydrostatic and hydrodynamic properties. Proteus Engineering AIO- FastShip- Maestro- RhinoMarine -JF-

Practically, JF- refers to the parametric associative bridge . It is the invisible protocol that ensures when you change a variable in RhinoMarine (say, the longitudinal center of buoyancy), FastShip automatically re-runs its resistance calculations, Maestro checks the new bending moment, and the Bill of Materials updates itself. For the naval architect, this stack means fewer

The water is choppy, and the deadlines are tight. But with this toolchain, at least the math works. Enter and its ambitious AIO (All-In-One) philosophy