!Restored: Advanced archicad training?
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ā2008-02-18 03:39 PM
Thaks in advance!

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ā2008-06-10 01:15 AM
JWD wrote:We wish, but time is money. For anyone actually working professionally in Archicad, one-on-one training or a master class or any other form of external problem-solving input has enormous payback because it shortcuts the learning process. So many Archicad skills are difficult to write about yet simple to demonstrate. Even just sitting for an hour watching another user potentially reveals new strategies.
'advanced training' = oxymoron, no? It seems to me that each person, once familiar enough with the program - will find their own creative path with the program in league with their own unique perspectives, history and talents...
Other than celebrating Archicad with the numerous power users on this forum, my travels to Archicad users worldwide show a remarkable ineptitude with the application. Most users exploit a mere fraction of Archicad's undocumented productivity strategies.
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ā2008-06-10 01:42 AM
JWD wrote:i guess it all depends on how much you know that you don't know. if you know that you know it all, chance are you don't . . .
... insofar as one usually has one's own trajectory at that point.
b f [a t ] p l a n b a r c h i t e c t u r e [d o t] n z
archicad | sketchup! | coffeecup

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ā2008-06-10 07:50 AM
JWD wrote:No matter how how much you know, or think you know, you will always benefit form getting together with others either in a class or a user group. You will learn so much from others. See new ways of using the program, new ways of thinking about how to use the program. Open your mind to new....
- exposure to the techniques of others CAN be useful - though sometimes of fairly LIMITED utility
Unless your close-minded.

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ā2008-06-10 11:02 AM
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ā2008-06-18 07:18 PM
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ā2008-06-18 07:47 PM
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ā2008-06-18 07:51 PM
~/archiben wrote:I'm absoulutely convinced I know a very limited amount. About archicad too. But what I do know I can really GO PLACES with... know what I mean...? It's workable...! That's what I meant by 'trajectory'... but also very many 'official' techniques taught by many 'archicad gurus yield an inferior result as far as I've seen. I take what I can from it though - and see if it works for me.JWD wrote:i guess it all depends on how much you know that you don't know. if you know that you know it all, chance are you don't . . .
... insofar as one usually has one's own trajectory at that point.

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ā2008-06-18 08:57 PM
Jacob wrote:I sympathize with your training frustration. It is true that many people have things to share that they charge for and shouldn't. Buyer beware. On the other hand, we do have the forum and the Wiki for sharing knowledge - not everything needs to be a question answered or a training session bought.
everyone wants to potentially make money teaching archicad.
For instance: Perhaps our colleague using just three pens can show here how efficient it is in order to benefit others. Adaptability brings complexity.
The reason for paid training is that most users simply don't have the gumption to figure out software on their own. Furthermore, training is not one day. Training is at least a week of one-on-one to get through even a small frame structure, but at the end of that week, a user should have a reasonable custom template and COMFORT with the application.
Software aptitude is not related to professional skill. The metaphoric world of cyberspace does collide with the sticks and bricks of architectural thinking. So, there is a leap of thinking required to employ BIM and many otherwise fine designers fall down the chasm trying to get the grail.
Another problem is that buying software presumes understanding the tools. Take Photoshop, for instance: all the tools are metaphoric to either graphic designer tools or darkroom tools. Ever used a razor knife or dodged an enlargement? When the Archicad seller says that you can render, it isn't the rendering tools that are confusing but the underlying concepts are. Modeling, publishing, etc - all expand the thinking beyond expectation. Not so much for new users, but established workers with families trying to adopt a new method....
Certainly, arrogant, energetic young guys without too much production pressure can take the time to research and experiment [like i did], but most professionals suffer from knowing that work is waiting for them. Get to it, already.
In 1992, when i started in Archicad, it was all new to me. Computing, CAD, 3D - I was a fifteen year experienced architect and the lateral model planning and data juggling was mesmerizing at first. I enjoyed twelve weekly training sessions - evenings, but those hours were barely enough for the instructor to demonstrate each of the workings of Archicad 4.5 - at that time, a rudimentary application at best.
Then i took two years [a slow period for me] of playing to get some comfort with it, but i was modeling curved, distorted elements for my sculpture practice and using/learning GDL a lot since Archicad didn't have the tools at hand like it does now.
If you want to be a trainer for $80. good for you, but for truly proficient users, actually using Archicad can produce better returns than this without suffering the dissatisfied whining of people lacking the fundamental aptitude to operate the program.
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ā2008-06-18 10:46 PM
Dwight wrote:The training frustration doesn't exist for me. It exist for new users. Which is why it is so hard to produce new users. I blame it on the fact that the learning materials and techniques are sold to the highest bidder. Making it so that only the biggest firms can afford training. This method only works in a world where all other information isn't free. The fact is that information can easily and inexpensively be distributed. Yet so far, Graphisoft wont acknowledge that. Unless it does, archicad will slowly and surely dissolve from lack of users. Thank god graphisoft wasn't as dumb as autodesk by charging to use the student version. Autodesk makes enough money to take risks though.
I sympathize with your training frustration.
If you want to be a trainer for $80. good for you, but for truly proficient users, actually using Archicad can produce better returns than this without suffering the dissatisfied whining of people lacking the fundamental aptitude to operate the program.
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ā2008-06-18 11:11 PM
Jacob wrote:Full agree with you, but one note, autodesk's educational license for students are free (not for 3dsmax). IĀ“m using revit 2009 free of charge.Dwight wrote:The training frustration doesn't exist for me. It exist for new users. Which is why it is so hard to produce new users. I blame it on the fact that the learning materials and techniques are sold to the highest bidder. Making it so that only the biggest firms can afford training. This method only works in a world where all other information isn't free. The fact is that information can easily and inexpensively distributed. Yet so far, no one wants to acknowledge that. Unless it does, archicad will slowly and surely dissolve from lack of users. Thank god graphisoft wasn't as dumb as autodesk by charging to use the student version. Autodesk makes enough money to take risk though.
I sympathize with your training frustration.
If you want to be a trainer for $80. good for you, but for truly proficient users, actually using Archicad can produce better returns than this without suffering the dissatisfied whining of people lacking the fundamental aptitude to operate the program.