2009-11-23 04:23 PM
A number of content libraries are currently being prepared for use by companies and individuals to aid in the implementation of a BIM-enabled workflow and standards based on AEC (UK) guidelines and best practices. Initially this includes Autodesk Revit and Bentley Building products. Expanded as and when further involvement is possible... Content libraries will be made available through the aec-uk.org website.Where is Graphisoft when these kinds of things are being discussed??
2010-01-22 02:03 PM
laszlonagy wrote:Maybe in the US but the EU would shut that down pretty quickly i think - they have been all over anti-competitive behaviour from industry heavy weights in other IT related fields (Microsoft, Intel, starting to look at Google). There is no way they would let an Autodesk proprietary file format become a standard without mandating some form of open access to that format for 3rd parties.Krippahl wrote:I don't know about that.
I expect we will have .rvt export capabilities then, as with .dwg for all this years.
It seems to me that Autodesk is trying to take total control of DWG. They may do the same with RVT.
If only Autodesk software can read-write RVT and it becomes some kind of a standard then everyone will be forced to use Autodesk software.
2010-01-25 04:07 AM
laszlonagy wrote:Krippahl wrote:I don't know about that.
I expect we will have .rvt export capabilities then, as with .dwg for all this years.
It seems to me that Autodesk is trying to take total control of DWG. They may do the same with RVT.
If only Autodesk software can read-write RVT and it becomes some kind of a standard then everyone will be forced to use Autodesk software.
2010-01-25 04:54 AM
Bricklyne wrote:You can't.
The paradoxical question is how can you have the Industry standard, if it is not an open format. But on the flip side, how can you maintain Industry dominance or a monopoly, if your format is open and accessible to your rivals and competitors.
2010-01-25 12:29 PM
Bricklyne wrote:DWG is a proprietary file format. It is not open and cannot qualify as a standard either. It only looks like a standard to many because it is so widely used.
Unlike .dwg format which is an open format and can be opened by multiple non-Autodesk software.
2010-01-25 12:57 PM
Bricklyne wrote:You either become a standard through official recognition (big-S standard) or by default through widespread usage (small-S standard). DWG fits into the latter. It might not be officially open, but because it is so widely used it has been reverse engineered so competing applications can read/write the format. It is this process that Autodesk is fighting against in the hope of shutting down competitors
The paradoxical question is how can you have the Industry standard, if it is not an open format. But on the flip side, how can you maintain Industry dominance or a monopoly, if your format is open and accessible to your rivals and competitors.
2010-01-25 03:15 PM
2010-01-25 03:31 PM
owen wrote:You raise a lot of interesting (and very valid) points. For one thing, this can be construed as being a very large reason as to why Autodesk have been so lukewarm and lackadaisical to supporting the IFC format - which has otherwise been adopted and openly supported by all the other major players. It basically puts them out of control of an open format, and forces them to follow rules laid out by others - despite their integrating IFC export capabilities into recent versions of Revit.Bricklyne wrote:You either become a standard through official recognition (big-S standard) or by default through widespread usage (small-S standard). DWG fits into the latter. It might not be officially open, but because it is so widely used it has been reverse engineered so competing applications can read/write the format. It is this process that Autodesk is fighting against in the hope of shutting down competitors
The paradoxical question is how can you have the Industry standard, if it is not an open format. But on the flip side, how can you maintain Industry dominance or a monopoly, if your format is open and accessible to your rivals and competitors.unlicensed* access to the format - but doing so would i think be shooting themselves in the foot as it could result in:
a) further moves to develop a non-DWG industry standard and bypass Autodesk even further
b) have regulatory bodies mandate Autodesk open up the format officially instead of the current industry initiatives like OpenDesign Alliance DWG libraries. I really do think this is something the EU would do if Autodesk shut all competitors out of DWG.
*Autodesk currently allow non-competing applications access to their DWG format, and I note from Ralphs link they are now co-operating with Bentley to officially (Autodesk) support DWG/DGN exchange. I wonder where this leaves Graphisoft?
2010-01-25 03:43 PM
Ralph wrote:You're right. I should have qualified that and said that .dwg is a de facto Industry standard and quasi-open format (in the sense that it's widely available and used as a standard and in the sense of what's been reverse engineered by others to allow their software to read-write .dwg formats)Bricklyne wrote:DWG is a proprietary file format. It is not open and cannot qualify as a standard either. It only looks like a standard to many because it is so widely used.
Unlike .dwg format which is an open format and can be opened by multiple non-Autodesk software.
Autodesk are continually striving to prevent others from using DWG - take a look at the Legal Issues section of the following article:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.dwg
2010-01-26 12:37 PM
Bricklyne wrote:Nor should they. As opposed to DWG, PDF is an open standard.
I don't believe Adobe are too bothered (not to the degree that Autodesk are) by the fact that tons of non-Adobe software can read/write and create PDF documents since, that only popularizes their brand even further.
2010-01-26 01:44 PM