mthd wrote:
I would like to see Graphisoft keep up the annual upgrades and not leave it till the last minute to make improvements.
Who does not appreciate the dimensioning upgrades in V12?
If you are not clever enough to keep a pace with technology
then maybe you should find an old program from 10 years ago
that takes 10 times as long to get a job done.
Some comments here sound as if you are not really supporting
the progress of ArchiCad???
............
What progress???!!!
Do you mean progress like a Stair tool that hasn't been fixed - I mean,.....um......'improved', since ArchiCAD 7 or 8 save for a few documentation and 2D representation fixes that allow you to better represent the limited stair types that you might be able to model from their limited templates? Or do you mean progress like version 12 Library parts, doors and windows which don't work correctly with ACv12 forcing one to have to use the version 11 Library parts , if they are available? Or SEO's which don't display properly (or at all) in plan view?
There's a big difference between not supporting this "progress" as you put it, and actually expecting GS to deliver a versatile, robust, and competitive enough product, functional on even the most basic of tasks and worthy enough of the yearly upgrades that they expect their customers to shell out for. Most of the users posting comments, requests, wishes (or even complaints if you wish) on this thread fall in the latter category and have been loyally supporting this product since the very early days. Unfortunately, a lot of the comments and wishes being posted on this thread have been in the Wishlist section for years on end, and the fact that people still have to keep asking for these improvements is just sad and somewhat pathetic ( I mean having to go back to AutoCAD to model and design something simply because ArchiCAD couldn't handle it? Something's just not right with that picture with AC12 considered).
Yes,
dimensioning upgrades are nice, but what would be that much nicer would be if we could actually use them (the upgrades) to dimension free-form modeled objects, or even basic but creative architectural objects like custom stairs modeled inside ArchiCAD with native tools and no add-ons, rather than having to go do them with some other program and hope that when we import them back into ArchiCAD, they don't break it for having too many polygons.
And speaking of Yearly upgrades, I think it can be safely concluded that this was a bad baaaad idea for Graphisoft, and certainly beyond debate at this point. Based on half-baked new features that don't function completely or correctly in one release and then having to be completed in the next release (Complex profiles not being able to do curved profiles in version 10 and then being able to in version 11, Curtain wall tool not capable of pure freeform profiles on the Z-axis, (who knows if it will be possible in the next version?) Lightworks - no radiosity etc etc etc), based on Third-party plugins and addons with poor yearly upgrade support that either don't keep up with the AC yearly upgrades (Sketchup-AC for Mac, Cigraph's addons last year) or simply don't keep up at all and just die off (Maxonform). And all just basically based on the fact that a yearly upgrade cycle simply doesn't afford the users enough time to adequately evaluate and use the product long enough (after all the necessary hotfixes to make it halfway functional enough, to upgrade to, that is) to give GS useful feedback towards their next version's upgrade for improvements; - because by the time that comes around, they are already deep in their internal beta-testing cycle and with features mostly locked down, any useful feedback coming back then, is mostly unusable towards the next version. That is, assuming GS actually listened to their users - the Wishlist section would tend to strongly indicate not.
And worse still it doesn't even look like the Yearly upgrade is doing Autodesk any good either, with all their vastly superior resources, considering their own v2010 Revit-ribbon debacle. So why maintain a yearly upgrade cycle to compete with them when it doesn't even work for them and has only served to completely dilute AutoCAD and seems headed to doing the same to Revit?
McNeel ( the makers of Rhinoceros, and a much smaller firm that GS) have always resisted the temptation to go into a more tighter upgrade cycle for competition's sake and tend to maintain their own internally regulated schedule (which often goes up to 2 to 3 years between new versions) with a very open robust beta-testing program that allows them to produce a more mature and feature-complete new version every time they actually do release a new version (for example, the next version - v5, - which is, incidentally still in the Beta-testing/WIP stage, already boasts a new feature set of about 100 new features and close to 200 improvements and fixes at the technical (under-the-hood) level - all while porting the entire program over to the Mac platform to run as a native Mac application; imagine an ArchiCAD release with 100, or 50, or even just 20 new major features).
And to boot, they can still remain competitive enough, so much so that Rhino3D is now the program of choice in most Architecture schools and graduate schools (certainly here in N. America) over both AutoCAD and Revit, and has been a staple of some of the major studios like Zaha Hadid, OMA, Asymptote among others. So it's not undoable or unfeasible, expecially to remain competitive and put out a strong product that still competes year-in, year-out with yearly upgrades from your competitors.
We still love using ArchiCAD, and we certainly appreciate a lot of the major improvements since their own version 8.0 debacle. But that was almost 5 versions ago - time enough for GS to stop patting themselves over the back for getting over that one; and there are still issues with the program that go all the way back to version 6.5 when they at least had the excuse back then, of technological (hardware) limitations to making it function properly or make necessary improvements. Now we have 64-bit technology which would presumably enhance the program's performance (certainly for anyone with more than 4 Gig's of RAM) while complementing their astute multi-core improvements, and yet, still no 64-bit ArchiCAD - just as an example.
So it comes as a little frustrating (more than usual) when users' complaints and improvement requests (such as in this thread) are dismissed by other users (whom GS seems to listen more to), by saying that everything is just hunky-dory, and no need to improve Graphisoft. Incidentally all this is definitely all too late for AC13 (and more than likely for AC14 as well) but them's the breaks when you're on a Yearly upgrade cycle; as a customer, wish your requests and hope for dear heaven, that someone on the development team had the insight to propose (and push for at least some of them) it a few versions ago, a few years ago, because it's probably too late to do anything about it now, and maybe next year as well.
.......just saying.
- Rant over.