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2004-07-17 09:01 PM
2010-05-17 12:58 AM
2011-07-12 11:26 PM
...imagine you own a big office. You employ 40 people who struggle to think of 6 characters for this month's password, and one person who compiles their home OS from source code...So in this instance, you have 1 potential user of an ArchiCAD version of Linux. At the moment, they are using a license of ArchiCAD in OSX or Windows. If they were given the option to change to the Linux version and they did so, Graphisoft get no money for their development time, as that user is just using the same license that they already were.
2011-07-12 11:59 PM
henrypootel wrote:I agree. Other than hobbyist tinkering, a very low equipment/software budget, or a desire not to give money to a big corporation, I don't see the point of Linux, really. None of those reasons, offer any profit incentive to Graphisoft to make the major investment required in producing a Linux edition.
I just don't see how it could ever be even close to viable for Graphisoft to do it without doing something horrendous like charging extra for Linux licenses or something.
2011-07-14 05:16 PM
2011-07-15 12:20 AM
"Big corporations" use Linux to shred their MASSIVE "equipment budgets", because it does what they want, how they want it.Referring to your link, the full title of the site is "Top 500 Supercomputer Sites". Since what we are talking about here is software to run on a Desktop OS, the Desktop OS share is the one that is appropriate.
2011-08-04 10:59 AM
2011-08-05 03:05 PM
2011-08-05 03:39 PM
laszlonagy wrote:]
Does any of those free programs you listed match ArchiCAD in complexity and amount of features?
I know OpenOffice but it had Sun and now Oracle behind it, both of which can clearly afford giving away software for free.
2011-08-05 03:56 PM
bswain1 wrote:The cost of Lion ($30) is negligible compared the cost of a draftperson or even the cost of a computer. Strange comparison. Why would ArchiCAD for Linux save you anything?
In my case, I might soon be able to afford a second license so I can use teamwork, since I haven't had to pay for graphics, office & administrative software. But it looks like, right now, I'm going to have to buy OSX lion instead, and the draftsperson who helps me is going to have to use DraftSight instead of ArchiCAD. If ArchiCAD were on Linux, that would not be an issue.
2011-08-05 05:56 PM
The cost of Lion ($30) is negligible compared the cost of a draftperson or even the cost of a computer. Strange comparison. Why would ArchiCAD for Linux save you anything?You're right about the negligible cost of keeping the OS updated, especially considering that computers only last a few years. The interns and CAD support I'm dealing with now will be helping me in a number of ways, however, including graphic editing, spreadsheet calcs, CAD, VIZ, and they will need to interface with my administrative software, like timesheet, etc.. I was picturing a scenario in which they use all the Linux-based software for those tasks, and stay on the same version as I using the same OS version for free. And they can use ArchiCAD with teamwork on my network license once I can afford the second license. Linux would only help in that they could use all the above software I do for free and update everything for free.
Right now, there are almost no new CAD users to be gained. Maybe some people will migrate from other CAD software, but in most of the cases they will be using Windows or OSX and not be running Linux.Do you think there won't be more CAD users migrating to Linux as more freeware comes available? I don't know. Right now, I have a CAD production person who is trained in building technology, but she uses some software that doesn't save in any industry-standard CAD format. I told her to buy something at OfficeDepot or some other office supply store that does save in .DWG, .DXF or other. She wants to try the freeware on Linux and see how it works. That's just an example.
Frankly, I have stopped playing with Linux. I did try several distributions and liked Ubuntu and Suse quite a lot, but gave up on migrating to Linux. The driver support of graphic cards might be one of the main reasons, but also available software is the issue. I just feel much more productive on OSX, although I miss some aspects of Windows and some of the software (Rhino+Grasshopper, Vegas Movie Studio and Visual Studio to name a few).I last used it a decade ago, but I was very productive at that time. I'm not trying to taut Linux as a panacea, I'm just seeing an awful lot of new freeware coming out of that community and wondering if Graphisoft should seek to operate in that community if it's going to grow.