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2006-05-02 04:19 PM
2006-05-03 11:06 PM
stefan wrote:I agree, the relative advantages and disadvantages at this point can be a factor for the users switching from flatcad and ADT, who are the big battle, and not for current users of Revit and ArchiCAD for whom it only makes sense to stick to their guns.
Switching, though, is not the best option.
2006-05-03 11:32 PM
~/archiben wrote:
........that the revit engine is far superior....~/archiben
2006-05-03 11:50 PM
~/archiben wrote:I just want to stress the fact that some of the "smaller, easy to implement features" in AC10 like for example the tracker and new selection options have been made possible only by a substantial re-write of the underlying engine in Archicad. And if you look for it, you'll find traces of this all over the program. There is no question we will se more results of this in later releases, as the development goes on, but an example is that without it the upcoming Macintel release would probably come after Adobe and Microsoft instead of the year before.Scott wrote:scott - having read through both the revit 9 and the archicad 10 new features guide it seems quite apparent that both have concentrated this release on consolidating many of each others smaller, simple or easy to implement features. that's not to say each haven't got their own 'look-ma-no-hands' selling point, or that there is any blatant copying happening, but i do understand what samsung is saying . . .
Similar in some ways, maybe. But a copy? Not even close.
that being said, it's also quite apparent that the engines that run both applications are markedly different. as an archicad user i have a gut feeling that the revit engine is far superior. whilst the revit feature set may be lacking in some areas at present (my opinion), and the '9' release didn't really have the flash-bang that previous releases have had, i believe that it will be able to accommodate much more future development than archicad's underlying technologies currently can.
2006-05-04 12:13 AM
Thomas wrote:Ah that makes me feel a little better
......have been made possible only by a substantial re-write of the underlying engine in Archicad.........
2006-05-04 12:52 AM
Big wrote:So be sure to archive everything in DXF.
And who knows what the future will look like in 3 years.
2006-05-04 01:27 AM
Dwight wrote:or in one file dxf or dwg....maybe IFC or such like thing...
So be sure to archive everything in DXF.
2006-05-04 01:38 AM
2006-05-04 12:55 PM
2006-05-04 03:20 PM
stefan wrote:Thing is, if you are just getting into the BIM game, then picking the best is not the point. The only consideration that matters is "who has the momentum?". On that score the obvious answer is Revit/autodesk.
But ArchiCAD and Revit are about the same quality level. To me, these two programs are clearly the top of the crowd. I don't want to pick any of them to be the best....
2006-05-04 05:35 PM
Chazz wrote:Did you make bad experiance with AC?
For the rest of us the question is not if we switch, but when.