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2007-08-06 12:19 PM
2007-08-12 01:20 PM
2007-08-12 06:02 PM
2007-08-12 06:47 PM
2007-08-17 03:26 PM
2007-08-17 07:43 PM
2007-08-18 02:25 AM
Thank you for your good work on this, Rob.
this hypothetical micro-niche idea that, trust me, is not on GS's scope and never will be, everI know, however my minuscule ideas attempt to finally bury this topic for good by either agitating (I see it works) or provoking all 15 (fifteen)
2007-08-18 02:28 AM
James wrote:I'll second that, definitely
/....I move that we change the "Example" in the the forum heading to, "Should Archicad be on a 12-month release cycle?"/.....
2007-09-03 12:40 PM
2007-09-03 02:30 PM
I am currently running Chief Architect and sketchup on Windows, on top of virtualbox, on top of Linux.I am sorry mate but I would have to be off my tits on a tart fuel to do this... it is so far from the commercial reality as it could be.
If folks want to take the position that AC simply doesn't have the resources to support a third platform, that argument at least has some legs.yep...
But if the argument is that Linux will never be a viable desktop platform, bzzzzt, I'm sorry wrong answer.bzzzzt, I'm sorry wrong forum... virtually nobody uses it in the area of arch., therefore most of us are not interested in further features... thus the topic name: Who the hell is using LINUX in Architecture?.
2007-09-03 03:31 PM
Yea, seems like the long way around, but actually once you factor in the additional RAM overhead virtualized XP is _alot_ easier to maintain. If Windows becomes corrupted for whatever reason it takes all of 10 seconds to roll back to a good snapshot, and a windows BSOD doesn't take down your whole work environment. As far as client virtualization goes you will increasingly see more and more of it, it has some major pluses. It is, imo, a better route than WINE/codeweavers or Windows on bare metal.I am currently running Chief Architect and sketchup on Windows, on top of virtualbox, on top of Linux.I am sorry mate but I would have to be off my tits on a tart fuel to do this... it is so far from the commercial reality as it could be.
If I had a week in the Bahamas for every vendor that _used_ to say Linux was not a platform that was important to them and now port to it...If folks want to take the position that AC simply doesn't have the resources to support a third platform, that argument at least has some legs.yep...
Hunh? wrong forum? is this whole thread rhetorical? Of course most don't do architecture work on Linux, there are few mainline CAD applications for it.But if the argument is that Linux will never be a viable desktop platform, bzzzzt, I'm sorry wrong answer.bzzzzt, I'm sorry wrong forum... virtually nobody uses it in the area of arch., therefore most of us are not interested in further features... thus the topic name: Who the hell is using LINUX in Architecture?.