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.
Really curious about this. Zero desire to use it, of course, but very interesting addition to the world of BIM. We've had ArchiCAD Start Edition for years of course. So the concept is old hat. And no Mac version.
Most Revit users (myself included) would run away screaming in light of the features removed in LT. But for manufacturers wanting to author their own families as part of their efforts to sell their product, and those who don't need to model anything but linear or single-curved forms, and don't need the collaboration aspects of Revit, then this is a good deal. Perhaps home designers and others modeling simple projects.
The question is, how much of the market wants/needs Revit LT?
That's similar with many of our feelings with the start edition of AC. The features missing are so useful that we couldn't live without them. Though the Solo version in the UK bridges the gap into a great offering.
Interesting point about buying the cheap version to make families. Though it seems like a better value for the community for that content to be created by professionals and not someone who can poorly use a LT version of the software.
I agree with Wes that it’s a non starter for anyone doing complex forms or collaborative work BUT may work for someone working solo in residential or small commercial market. If solo I could live without:
photorender/vray-(I use Artantis)
copy monitor/workshare-(not needed for solo work)
point cloud
IFC export (Revit is crap at this anyway)
I would find not having concept massing, model in place, adaptive component etc very limiting as I use these a lot but there are many Revit users- usually documenters- who do not.
Wonder if you could use Vasari and bring that stuff in?
I view this as another step by Autodesk to try to lure their existing AutoCAD LT customers to start moving to BIM.
As far as I know, AutoCAD has to most users of any Autodesk product, and within AutoCAD, AutoCAD LT has many more users than the full AutoCAD program.
So there are millions of users who are possible candidates for an upgrade from 2D CAD to BIM.
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Well, it is not limiting collaboration all together. You can still link other Revit files or CAD files. Worksets does not make the collaboration. For a residential practice it is typically more than enough.
We have survived years without Shell or Morph didn't we?
I'm barely a Revit users but fairness is fairness.
Revit LT will definitely summon a lot of Autocad LT users. And that's the point isn't is?
I'm amazed the Graphisoft has not lured them already with some special Autocad LT to Archicad Plus converter. It would actually be much more familiar environment for them than Revit. Now with LT and Ribbon the ship is sailed.