Learn to manage BIM workflows and create professional Archicad templates with the BIM Manager Program.
2006-05-02 04:19 PM
2006-05-05 03:22 PM
Chazz wrote:Yeah, are you feeling OK?
(Gosh, this post sounds neither nattering nor particularly negative. I'm gonna stop here)
2006-05-05 04:00 PM
Dwight wrote:I use a quill plotter to archive to parchment.Big wrote:So be sure to archive everything in DXF.
And who knows what the future will look like in 3 years.
2006-05-05 04:04 PM
TomWaltz wrote:Actually I lost my job last month, so yeah, I'm a little off my game. The financial company I did real estate development for just collapsed in a spectacular flameout bankruptcy last month (when was the last time you couldn't ask your previous boss for a reference/letter of recommendation because he was in jail in lieu of $5M bail?)
Yeah, are you feeling OK?
2006-05-05 04:15 PM
Chazz wrote:Yikes, I'm sorry to hear that.TomWaltz wrote:Actually I lost my job last month, so yeah, I'm a little off my game. The financial company I did real estate development for just collapsed in a spectacular flameout bankruptcy last month (when was the last time you couldn't ask your previous boss for a reference/letter of recommendation because he was in jail in lieu of $5M bail?)
Yeah, are you feeling OK?
I bring this up because I interviewed yesterday with a firm that uses ADT exclusively. I know lot's of places thatownADT but very few that actually useit or use it as a BIM tool. I asked about Revit and they were dead set against it and felt that ADT was the future. They do massive multifamily projects (300+ unit developments) in this semi 2D-3D style that to me seemed a little caotic but they had a system that worked and were not interested in changing it. I tried to politely suggest that some people felt that ADT was going to be phased out in favor of Revit but they were pretty sure this was not the case. It was a real eye opener and I left sort of impressed with their stick-to-it-ivness. So now my motto is ADT FOREVER!!
Only problem is I've never used it.......
2006-05-05 04:23 PM
2006-05-05 04:28 PM
TomWaltz wrote:
I'm told if you can actually figure out ADT it's not so bad, but the few people who do figure it out get a Congressional Medal of Honor....
2006-05-05 04:37 PM
Miki wrote:We hired a guy a while back who was a total whiz with AutoCAD and ADT. He told me that ADT was really, really powerful but also really, really hard to learn, so most people used only its most basic functions.
What I heard is that most ADT users, use is as an enhanced ACAD. no real 3D.
2006-05-05 05:58 PM
samsung wrote:Funny, because reading the new feature list of AC 10 reminds me of Revit 1.0
Revit reminds me of AC 6.5.
2006-05-05 06:03 PM
Miki wrote:and Autodesk recognizes this, too. ADT is now being marketed as "AutoCAD for Architects" or sometimes referred to as A4A. This marketing strategy takes ADT further from the "BIM" market, and back towards the "enhanced 2D" route. The tools will still allow 3D, and even base AutoCAD is more 3D now in r2007, but the idea will be that the tools "enhance 2D productivity". Revit will be marketed as Autodesk's ONLY BIM solution.
What I heard is that most ADT users, use is as an enhanced ACAD. no real 3D.
2006-05-05 06:36 PM