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2005-10-25 09:59 PM
2006-02-01 07:20 AM
Richard wrote:I understand the concern, but it's really not like that. The new features aren't typically a "huge" jump in terms of learning curve. They always seem to fit and be intuitive to the workflow. It usually takes a day or maybe two of playing with and testing the new features before one is familiar with them. There is so much anticipation from users around the release dates...and this anticipation would not be the case if the users "dreaded" another release because they had to learn a bunch of new tools. For most users, there is no hesitation....the new release comes out and they download and use it immediately.
I'm not sure this speed of development is necessarily a good thing. As an outside observer, I get the feeling that trying to learn Revit and then cope with all of the rapid upgrades feels like trying to jump into a torrential river and then swim. It would certainly give ME hesitation about jumping into a fire-hose blast of features. I'd worry that I'd go on a two week vacation and miss a couple of upgrades-- then I'd be struggling to keep up.
2006-02-01 07:25 AM
2006-02-01 07:29 AM
archislave wrote:That's a backwards thinking statement in the computer age. LESS accurate? Since all constraints in Revit are user definable, it would seem that with a bit more learning on your part, you would understand what to constrain and what not to, depending on what relationships you needed to be inherent to the model. Moving a wall and finding out it was constrained to something else really falls back on the user for making that relationship in the first place.
Revit needs to loosen up and not try to be so accrurate.
2006-02-01 07:32 AM
2006-02-01 07:37 AM
Richard wrote:For the most part, user forums such as AUGI and this one tend to be a place for people to go when they have "problems" and as more and more users come on board, there will be a tendency for the forum to seem more "arrgggggh" than positive. I would tend to think that this AC forum is even more a "complaint" forum than AUGI.
postings have transitioned from "how could I do this?" postings, to complaints about bugs, bewilderment on how to use the multitude of new features, and far more "arrggghhh"s than there used to be. Not surprisingly, introducing all these new features at such a rapid rate is also introducing a whole lot more bugs and user confusion.
2006-02-01 11:06 AM
archislave wrote:Sorry to be picky, but isn't ArchiCAD itself from a 'foreign' country. I also suspect that the NZ made tools conform to NZ standards, which might possibly be who they were originally made for...
Many of these tools are made in foreign countries like NZ and do not conform to US standards and probably not Euro standards for that matter.
2006-02-01 11:12 AM
2006-02-01 01:20 PM
archislave wrote:Man, I'd draw a separate clerestory plan even if I was drawing the whole project by hand as in the old days. It should be part of the documentation anyway, so what's the problem? That Archicad doesn't draw it for you?
I had to create a story called upper walls to receive the clerestory windows and the upper wall of the exterior without brick.
2006-02-01 03:01 PM
archislave wrote:Once I suspected GS to hire people to post such messages to keep AC defenders awake…
Many of these tools are made in foreign countries like NZ and do not conform to US standards and probably not Euro standards for that matter.
2006-02-01 03:11 PM