Collaboration with other software
About model and data exchange with 3rd party solutions: Revit, Solibri, dRofus, Bluebeam, structural analysis solutions, and IFC, BCF and DXF/DWG-based exchange, etc.

Autodesk acquires Ecotect!

Anonymous
Not applicable
Hi All!

Now Autodesk acquires Ecotect too!

visit www.squ1.com for more!
55 REPLIES 55
Anonymous
Not applicable
There are two prongs to the viability of Revit and AC in the long term:

1) Scalability -- Revit is still (and I assume AC is too) a challenge to use on large projects, and 2009 has taken a nosedive of sorts with respect to display performance (a problem the developers hope to resolve to bring 2009 back to where 2008 was in terms of display performance). Revit and AC both require a modular approach to handling large projects, but how much nicer would it be to have everything in one file?

2) Usability -- both apps are complex tools, and training AND mentoring are required. I think AC should have pwned the market by now -- they've had the time, and had the software been easy enough... well, news travels fast. Revit is fairly easy to learn, and the development curve has been steep. Revit's debatably flatter learning curve and the "good news" aspect of Revit's predominantly happy user base means the software essentially sells itself. Autodesk pulled the wool over with ADT (which made Revit a harder sell initially), so it's not like they've made us drink their special Kool-Aid
Anonymous
Not applicable
Hi All

Just surfed Ecotect and Autodesk to get some opinions of this. Really interested to hear your replies. I myself am pretty sad about the whole thing. It also doesn't make much sense. Besides the Ecotect and Green Building Studio acquisition, Revit also has full integration with IES energy simulation software http://www.iesve.com/content/default.asp?page=s133

This is a direct competitor for Ecotect. It makes no sense. My feeling is that they won't do a "Lightscape" (at least I hope not). That was a bit of a PR disaster for them and they have spent the last 5 years trying to integrate some kind of lighting analysis in their own products but have still not properly managed what Lightscape did beautifully.

IMHO they will use the Maya/Max model and keep them running side by side. It will certainly be interesting to see how things unravel in the next couple of years. Also if they do support the software as a stand alone piece and don't integrate fully then I HOPE they improve some of the Ecotect support which is, to be honest, bloody awful.
TomWaltz
Participant
metanoia wrote:
Autodesk pulled the wool over with ADT (which made Revit a harder sell initially)
How do you mean?
Tom Waltz
Anonymous
Not applicable
Just a question on survival of ArchiCad by having Rvit around.

Is it that outside United States ArchiCad is dominery & it does not seem to go away?

Unless I am mistaken what is this prediction that eventualy ArchiCad is Gone With The Wind. The thought of it makes me want to retire and hat sends pain down m spine
Joseph
Dwight
Newcomer
TomWaltz wrote:
metanoia wrote:
Autodesk pulled the wool over with ADT (which made Revit a harder sell initially)
How do you mean?
ADT= Crap, therefore trust was lost.
Dwight Atkinson
Anonymous
Not applicable
"oreopoulos" wrote:

6) Green Architecture is very important (at least for EU architects, with the new legislation that requires buildings to have energy labelling) and the lack of tools would be really embarrassing.


FWIW
Have a look at: http://www.archiphysik.at/com_gb_25.html

according to their site:
The method employed by ArchiPHYSIK to calculate heat and thermal energy consumption is based on a Europe-wide standardized calculation method (EN 832).

They have localized versions for Germany, Austria, Hungary and Czech Republic.

Belgian architects have to use a software tool that is provided by the government.
Anonymous
Not applicable
TomWaltz wrote:
metanoia wrote:
Autodesk pulled the wool over with ADT (which made Revit a harder sell initially)
How do you mean?
What Dwight said 😉

A lot of people wanted to have NOTHING to do with Revit initially because they figured it was going to be another abortion like ADT. Had Revit been bought up by someone else, Revit's adoption might not have been so slow. ADT is not crapware; it's relatively free of bugs, and is well documented -- it's just that it's software for programmers, by programmers. It's software that works the way you think, if you think in FORTRAN.
Laszlo Nagy
Community Admin
Community Admin
Joseph wrote:
Just a question on survival of ArchiCad by having Rvit around.

Is it that outside United States ArchiCad is dominery & it does not seem to go away?

Unless I am mistaken what is this prediction that eventualy ArchiCad is Gone With The Wind. The thought of it makes me want to retire and hat sends pain down m spine
Joseph
ArchiCAD is the market leader among architectural BIM softwares or among the firsts in many European countries, a far as I know.
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Anonymous
Not applicable
Perhaps it is. It would be strange if it was not, when AC is here for 25 years.
The fact is that once upon a time it was a real leader regarding features.
Now its not. If that continues it will show on numbers too. Sooner or later
Mats_Knutsson
Advisor
Thoughts and partly comments from a very nice part of the world. First I wanted to comment on the big Lurks comments but went into a more general introvert discussion...

ArchiCAD is the leading BIM software in use in our area and the much preferred interface among architects compared to the different "similar" products. Architects here say that ArchiCAD has an interface that is very appealing to them and that it is easy and intuitive to learn. Concerning modeling I guess all the softwares have their ups and downs but when it comes to "from idea to documentation" ArchiCAD is on the top. Lot's of space for development though!

Large projects... A very large project can be slow in ArchiCAD but at least it can be done which obviously isn't the case with some other BIM packages. Check out the VICO projects for size!!! Speed and size is important and will become even more so the more we approach BIM. It's in real life use when you discover good or bad that things about a system that actually will affect your every day work. Some will choose system A, some system B and some system C, D etc...it's a hard thing to do and requires serious investment in time and money which is why it's seldom done. We recently had architects changing to ArchiCAD by discovering the hard way that their initial choice of hype-BIM-software was wrong (large models was one of the reasons...).

Proprietary BIM-solutions... Hopefully concerned governments will react since the strategic question of BIM is the open information. A proprietary BIM solution is the worst possible solution strategically.
Easy way in - no way out...as an example some major facility managers in Sweden based everything on ADT several years ago...and now they can't change...they still demand 3D ADT models because they're stuck with it....lesson not learned!

The thing I lack in the BIM-debate is the architects ability or eager to do BIM. I rather see large scale BIM driven from the construction side of the business and the architects will then have two choices: conform or step even closer to pure design.
The tremendous power of VICO shows that building the production model demands another type of knowledge than a typical architect or engineer has. There is enough to gain to simply rebuild whatever model/drawing that are produced by the architect/engineers.

More important BIM requires another way of working together. Partnering and cooperation is a must and a clear process-owner that can realize and distribute the benefits of BIM is a necessity. Today the large contractors here in Sweden want to use BIM but they don't support BIM in the way they work (actually they just woke up to see the word BIM everywhere and it's still in a kind of buzz-word phase). It will take some time to change the heavy organizations to actually work and benefit from BIM. There is a 100% strong voice stating BIM is the only way but a very large part of that 100% doesn't dare to admit they don't know what BIM is...they're just trying not to appear uniformed/unsmart.

Check out the Viking effort in the BIM Storm London that gave the Norwegians the Overall title as well as the Multi-disciplinary Design and Constructability award. They pulled off a serious IFC project. That's BIM!!! More information will come.

Whatever happens we're entering BIM. Halleluja! We're still infants though...does an infant have the ability to make a wise BIM decision? Open BIM or proprietary BIM?

All IMHO and a bit more unfocused than my first intention...I'm under swedish Graphisoft flag but these thoughts are my highly personal ones. Now off for a month of lovely vacation away from BIM and CAD and everything else job-related that occupies my brain like 110% of the time. I will learn kiteboarding this summer and hopefully there will be wind on saturday. Break a leg to me then...
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