2004-12-02 04:06 AM
2004-12-03 06:40 PM
Rakela wrote:Prices comparison can be misleading, and can depend too much on the local sales people; list price comparison is also not always precise gauge.
can you please put down the prices for all softwares mentioned here?? to have a clear idea of prices difference...thanks
2004-12-03 06:56 PM
2004-12-03 06:59 PM
2004-12-03 07:00 PM
2004-12-03 07:06 PM
TexasTechGrad wrote:AFAIK no. I know for a fact that you can upgrade any old legal license to the current version, and that since 8.0 the upgrade from the previous version is about 15% of the price. All this for International version - you should definitely check with the local sales people. As always, your mileage may vary .
One reason that I stopped at Revit is their pricing. You're basically paying a yearly due. They force you pay to ugrade NOW (every year) or pay a lot more LATER. Does ArchiCAD do anything like that?
2004-12-03 07:08 PM
Rakela wrote:Sorry if I misunderstood
did i say or suggest that i would select the software according to their price??
Rakela wrote:I am sure your local people who sell each of the softwares you are interested in would be happy to oblige?
i would like to know the cost of softwares in question here...if anybody knows it please, i would appreciate it...
thx
2004-12-03 07:09 PM
Djordje wrote:Djordje - Other than the multi-user environment, what do you believe defines "class" in this case? The implication is that Chief Architect is "lower class", yet there are a number of features (framing, rendering, material calculations, ease of use, 3D editing, door/window schedules) that AC should aspire to. In rendering packages, you might possibly define a "class" (e.g. includes radiosity (which Chief has out of the box, BTW) or NURBS), in CAD packages the class distinction may not be as discrete as you represent.
Also, you can not compare ArchiCAD and Revit with Chief Architect; if you compare, it shoudl be the same class of software.
2004-12-04 04:26 AM
2004-12-04 04:28 AM
2004-12-04 05:24 AM