I'm jumping into this thread and confess that I don't really know how seriously anyone takes this press release as a piece of news.
Disclaimer: I am an ArchiCAD Reseller.
I've scoured the web via Google for reaction to the Autdesk / Bentley announcement and discovered two things:
One
There is next to no reaction in the AEC blogosphere to this story; what's on offer seems to be coming from the "geospatial" - read Civil/GIS - community. GIS has a long way to go before it can hope to speak with BIM platforms designed to document buildings. ESRI and others seem to be struggling with what they should do, or have determined that its not relevant at this point in time.
AEC CAD has all but ceased to be an interesting topic for anyone to write about. Ralph Grabowski now writes almost exclusively about mechanical 3D CAD, Evan Yares has almost abandoned the tecnics of CAD in favour of the far more interesting topic of process and methodology (he's still a pretty good read, but very different from where he was at a year ago). Lachmi Khemalni's coverage of the story brought more comment than most including an entry posted by someone from Nemetschek. He upbraided her for being not in-depth enough in her coverage. Her response was to 'out' him. All very polite. So far no one has accused her of being a shill for Revit, but maybe there are those who see her that way.
Two
Most bloggers and stringers for the major CAD news services are simply cutting and pasting the press release into their articles. Is that helpful? It ain't journalism.
But this isn't news either. Fake Steve Jobs (R.I.P.) rightly and masterfully skewered the media for this and did it insightfully and humourously. He really did a great job of putting both the industry and the press who pretend o cover it in their place. In his mind all of the Emperors are without clothes.
So
We are doing a disservice to ourselves and our AEC disciplines by not raising the bar a little bit higher than it is when it comes to offering reasoned opinions. Reading articles critically and responding is a skill which I fear we've lost. As a consequence, the pundits who once covered BIM in its infancy have simply walked away.
This is a news story in my opnion that is worthy of considerable coverage, but I'm waiting for someone to tackle it as one story in the bigger paradigm shift that is BIM.
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