2007-10-17 11:00 PM
2007-10-20 07:04 AM
Chazz wrote:TomWaltz wrote:I think this misses the point. When your engineer switches to Revit Structure, your investment in Revit as an architect just became much more valuable. For Autodesk, becoming (and controlling) the standard is all that matters (ask Microsoft about this). The network effects of owning the tools to the complete design cycle are undeniable and huge. And as I have shouted in other threads, this (along with the tying of Autodad upgrades to Revit) is the death knell for ArchiCAD.
I think it would be a huge mistake for GS to try to compete in the multi-discipline arena unless they plan to quadruple in size.
Can Graphisoft make a good structures package? Should they try? Of course not: They can't even publish the current drivel without gobs of bugs and frustrated users. Thus, I agree with Tom that getting others to do it is the least bad option. But for that to happen you would need killer SDK's or a fantastic interchange format. The former is not very likely and the latter is not there yet.
Autodesk has done what all aggressive competitors do: they have given their competition (Graphisoft) a set of options that are bad, worse, or impossible.
2007-10-20 09:07 AM
Bricklyne wrote:Read my sig, dude. I don't yammer. I NATTER!
It's one thing to point out shortcomings, but its quite another to go on and on, yammering about, without exactly making any particular point.
Bricklyne wrote:This is precisely the frame of reference I object to. Size does not make a company's products better. Bigger budgets do not yield greater innovation. A strong market position does not protect a company from disruptive forces (in fact, the opposite is frequently true).
It's already been pointed out that Graphisoft has chosen not to go down that route because they clearly lack the resources, size (and perhaps greed) of an Autodesk-size company to want to put out a do-it-all software or suite of softwares.
2007-10-20 11:58 AM
Chazz wrote:Why would Revit Architecture become more valuable? I think you're falsely assuming that they play and work perfectly together. They don't. I would use a 3rd party program like Navisworks or Solibri for model coordination any day.
I think this misses the point. When your engineer switches to Revit Structure, your investment in Revit as an architect just became much more valuable.
2007-10-24 08:45 AM
Bricklyne wrote:Alright, already enough with the 100,000 sf barrier nonsense. Please add a zero to that number now, thank you, carry on, interesting thread
Some of us like to design buildings and projects over 100,000 sq.ft without the program choking up nor without breaking the building up illogically, so just so we can work on it efficiently while effectively defeating the whole purpose and point of designing a building with BIM coordination. Oh, and we also like our programs to have robust API's and fully functioning IFC-interoperability that allows us to share our models with colleagues who happen not to use the same program or family of program and who might want to send us back information in the same model.
2007-10-25 05:03 PM
2007-10-25 06:21 PM
2007-10-25 07:12 PM
TomWaltz wrote:Why does your flavor of Revit become more valuable when a colleague from a supporting discipline adopts another flavor or Revit? For the same reason that your Skype account becomes more valuable when your mom signs up. This idea is nothing new.
Why would Revit Architecture become more valuable? I think you're falsely assuming that they play and work perfectly together. They don't. I would use a 3rd party program like Navisworks or Solibri for model coordination any day.
2007-10-25 07:26 PM
metanoia wrote:Thank you.
But the #1 innovation is ease-of-use.
2007-10-25 07:29 PM
2007-10-25 07:57 PM