As far as official opinions go, they were mainly interested in the StudioTools and only to a lesser extent in Maya.
Sure, they allready did this in the past: Inventor to join (and overrule) Mechanical Desktop (AutoCAD-based) and Revit to join (and overwhelm) Architectural Desktop (also AutoCAD-based, do we see a pattern?).
But all these applications are still on the market and are still being upgraded.
Sure, Lightscape is dead, but most of what Lightscape could do is now possible in VIZ and 3ds max.
It was a surprising announcement, but merging two very distinct applications (that are both getting old) into one doesn't sound like the best road to success... I rather think that a next-generation of these applications will build in the aquired intellectual property and core developers base of the old ones. Think rahther in terms of moving from 3D Studio for DOS to 3ds max and from Wavefront and Poweranimator into Maya.
At the recent Autodesk User conference, it was pretty clear that the 'new' Autodesk kids (Revit and Inventor) are getting pushed rather hard. But not to say that they aren't thinking about the future of AutoCAD...
Interesting times, that's for sure.
--- stefan boeykens --- bim-expert-architect-engineer-musician ---
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