2010-06-02 11:51 PM
2010-06-06 05:27 PM
2010-06-07 02:39 AM
Unfortunately, the makers of CATIA support the aerospace and automobile industries primarily and have focused their development efforts on these industries. The latest CATIA Version 5 now emulates Proengineer with its parametric capability. It has become more oriented towards mechanical design and employs a very restrictive, history-dependent methodology suited to smaller mechanical parts and assemblies. It is not developed for large, complicated, custom and ever changing architecture projects.I can't help thinking GehryTechnologies might disagree !
2010-06-07 05:02 AM
amonle wrote:Given the lackluster marketing, it would not surprise me at all if selling this brand, along with the patented TW technology to this certain company, is part of the GS business plan. No point investing heavily in marketing if you're just going to sell the company in the near future.
I can't help but think that if a certain California based company owned this branding asset they would be promoting and protecting it vigorously.
2010-06-07 10:08 AM
Richard wrote:If that's the same certain California based company that I'm also thinking about, I would absolutely LOVE for ArchiCAD to be owned and developed by them. I would even switch platforms just for them.amonle wrote:Given the lackluster marketing, it would not surprise me at all if selling this brand, along with the patented TW technology to this certain company, is part of the GS business plan. No point investing heavily in marketing if you're just going to sell the company in the near future.
I can't help but think that if a certain California based company owned this branding asset they would be promoting and protecting it vigorously.
2010-06-07 10:12 AM
Richard wrote:Wait.amonle wrote:Given the lackluster marketing, it would not surprise me at all if selling this brand, along with the patented TW technology to this certain company, is part of the GS business plan. No point investing heavily in marketing if you're just going to sell the company in the near future.
I can't help but think that if a certain California based company owned this branding asset they would be promoting and protecting it vigorously.
2010-06-07 02:48 PM
2010-06-07 03:26 PM
Bricklyne wrote:LOL. The California company that I am thinking of is in Marin County - San Rafael - if that helps.Richard wrote:Wait.amonle wrote:Given the lackluster marketing, it would not surprise me at all if selling this brand, along with the patented TW technology to this certain company, is part of the GS business plan. No point investing heavily in marketing if you're just going to sell the company in the near future.
I can't help but think that if a certain California based company owned this branding asset they would be promoting and protecting it vigorously.
I just realized that there's another California based company that you might have been referring to. And I would absolutely hate for ArchiCAD to be bought out by them - since that would basically mean the end of ArchiCAD.
Bricklyne wrote:It's strange because I was thinking of a couple of things yesterday
And the lackluster GS marketing is probably a product of Nemetschek's "hand's off" approach to managing their different owned subsidiaries (Vectorworks, Maxon Line, Allplan) as well as a residue of GS's own timid approach from its pre-Nemetschek days. I mean, just consider how vigorously Vectorworks and Maxon products (C4D) are marketed by comparison.
2010-06-07 03:42 PM
2010-06-07 11:28 PM
amonle wrote:Bricklyne wrote:LOL. The California company that I am thinking of is in Marin County - San Rafael - if that helps.
......
Wait.
I just realized that there's another California based company that you might have been referring to. And I would absolutely hate for ArchiCAD to be bought out by them - since that would basically mean the end of ArchiCAD.
amonle wrote:
........ ... but as it is don't expect big investments in GS anytime soon.
Manage your expectations for v15.