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2006-01-20 12:46 PM
2006-01-23 05:54 PM
Lennox wrote:My typical gloom and doom prognostication is that AC is the past and Revit is the future. And that is scary, mostly because AC had such a fantastic lead and what did they do? They sat on it. The development over the years has been so painfully incremental, so plodding and obvious that it numbs the brain.
I prefer AC, but the more I play with Revit, the more I am becoming impressed with it.
2006-01-23 09:44 PM
Chazz wrote:I was feeling this way, out of frustration with some issues in ArchiCAD, until I began evaluating Revit 8.1 ... and now cannot see how one can claim one is the future and the other the past. They each do some things well and some things badly. IMHO, knowing where ArchiCAD is headed, I think ArchiCAD is still ahead.Lennox wrote:My typical gloom and doom prognostication is that AC is the past and Revit is the future.
I prefer AC, but the more I play with Revit, the more I am becoming impressed with it.
2006-01-24 09:42 AM
They sat on it. The development over the years has been so painfully incremental, so plodding and obvious that it numbs the brain.sadly, it's so true and I think this attitude in the AC development has become rather annoying among the users and that includes 'half-cooked' or 'quick-fixed' features and solutions. Each new version of AC actually feels like extended beta with tools half-way there not properly implemented (lightworks - it's a bad joke to have a hi-tech engine handling a radiosity, raytracing, atmospheric effects and we've got two library parts instead that 'will' do it all - how beautiful and excellent idea!!! - I mean, what a slack).
2006-01-24 05:41 PM
Karl wrote:Maybe not, but here's the thing that gives me pause: The fact that AC does not take advantage of current technologies on my OS (I'm not even talking about Quartz Extreme or something, how about just file names longer than 31 characters?) makes me think that maybe the underpinnings and modularity of the code is not terribly robust. I'm no programer but I suspect this is why so many of the "new" features feel like extensions of things tried in earlier releases. Never is there something that really shifts the paradigm. All the recent releases leave one saying "
I don't buy software because it looks sexy/flashy
2006-01-25 12:13 AM
Chazz wrote:worth quoting the whole lot. i'm 100% behind you more than you will ever know . . .
Maybe not, but here's the thing that gives me pause: The fact that AC does not take advantage of current technologies on my OS (I'm not even talking about Quartz Extreme or something, how about just file names longer than 31 characters?) makes me think that maybe the underpinnings and modularity of the code is not terribly robust. I'm no programer but I suspect this is why so many of the "new" features feel like extensions of things tried in earlier releases. Never is there something that really shifts the paradigm. All the recent releases leave one saying "finally!instead of WOW!
For example, Why should I have to manage all these links between AC and PM? Isn't that what computers are good at? Why do I need to explicitly tell AC that I need a site plan, 4 elevations and a few sections? why is it so hard to generate lists of things in my building? Why do I need to annotate things again and again when the thing itself knows what it is?
... but I'm just amazed at the mediocrity we put up with as users. I'd like the bar set higher and while I'm at it, I'd like to incite a little more outrage..
The thing I hate more than anything else is that this software is so complex and hard to use. This means that many of us have spent half our professional lives mastering it --Which means we're loathe to switch to Revit or whatever --Which means few companies will be willing to risk such a development challenge --Which means that the companies that do make such a tool today don't have a fire under their butts to make it any better tomorrow. All of this inertia means that as an AC user I'm soooo glad that Revit is coming along. A war for dominance is heating up and it does not look good for GS. Want to know how this war might turn out? The clue to the future could be the past. In the long run this should be good for all of us.
Better stop here. Flame meter rising. Veins popping at temples.
2006-01-25 03:13 AM
~/archiben wrote:You rock!! Love the image.... I give it a "10"
worth quoting the whole lot. i'm 100% behind you more than you will ever know . . .
i think it's also worth extracting this image from your link and displaying it for as many GS employees as possible to see . . .
cheers
~/archiben
2006-01-25 09:44 AM
2006-01-25 11:45 AM
V10 will cover some of the gaps, but there are so many left, and we have to wait 2 more years.I am afraid so....
The clue to the future could be the past.Excellent reading for GS product managers... good job mate!!!
2006-01-25 06:38 PM
Chazz wrote:No truer word were ever spoken, err, written. You'll notice the nods of agreement coming from the seasoned trainers posting here, and as someone who performs internal ArchiCAD support and training in a small firm I absolutely concur. Despite all that ArchiCAD can do I see coworkers
The thing I hate more than anything else is that this software is so complex and hard to use. This means that many of us have spent half our professional lives mastering it --Which means we're loathe to switch to Revit or whatever --Which means few companies will be willing to risk such a development challenge --Which means that the companies that do make such a tool today don't have a fire under their butts to make it any better tomorrow...
2006-01-26 09:51 AM