Hugh will be my guide here and anyone else that wants to tag along is welcome.
I have 4 different Cad programs that I'm trying to evaluate and make up my mind on.
First up is Rhino 3d which that have ported to mac os as a free beta. I've made no headway with this one, totally unintuitive and I'm too lazy to sit through videos when my screen looks nothing like what's on the PC version
Next is Dassault Systemes DraftSight, a free 2D version, ported to all OSs. These guys make SolidWorks and clearly they want you to get hooked and step up to the varsity version for $3-4K. Their only web-based tutorials make it look so simple but then I can't seem to ever make what they want me to make.
AutoCAD 2013. ported to mac, seems like the real deal, a bit more intuitive than Rhino but doesn't seem to have Rhino's facility with surfaces in 3D. I always kind of feel like I'm lost in the bowels on the DeathStar. It's all a bit sombre.
Lastly Autodesk Inventor 2013. This one seems like a winner albeit still from the dark side. Very intuitive and more importantly fully parametric. Unfortunately it's PC only and totally worthless with Apple's magic mouse on a windoze seven driver. Lots on nice interactive video tutorials to get you started. It's tempting to buy a $300 mouse to go "native".
Everyone who has a seat of SolidWorks is telling me to just forget about the others but I'm not about to commit fiscal suicide to discover that I'm too brain dead to learn any new tricks. That said I can handle G-code and do all sorts of useful tasks with a cnc machine with mach-3 for starters. Once I have it working for me i'll be far more motivated to jump into 3d head first and not forget what I learned last week if I'm using it everyday.
I have 4 different Cad programs that I'm trying to evaluate and make up my mind on.
First up is Rhino 3d which that have ported to mac os as a free beta. I've made no headway with this one, totally unintuitive and I'm too lazy to sit through videos when my screen looks nothing like what's on the PC version
Next is Dassault Systemes DraftSight, a free 2D version, ported to all OSs. These guys make SolidWorks and clearly they want you to get hooked and step up to the varsity version for $3-4K. Their only web-based tutorials make it look so simple but then I can't seem to ever make what they want me to make.
AutoCAD 2013. ported to mac, seems like the real deal, a bit more intuitive than Rhino but doesn't seem to have Rhino's facility with surfaces in 3D. I always kind of feel like I'm lost in the bowels on the DeathStar. It's all a bit sombre.
Lastly Autodesk Inventor 2013. This one seems like a winner albeit still from the dark side. Very intuitive and more importantly fully parametric. Unfortunately it's PC only and totally worthless with Apple's magic mouse on a windoze seven driver. Lots on nice interactive video tutorials to get you started. It's tempting to buy a $300 mouse to go "native".
Everyone who has a seat of SolidWorks is telling me to just forget about the others but I'm not about to commit fiscal suicide to discover that I'm too brain dead to learn any new tricks. That said I can handle G-code and do all sorts of useful tasks with a cnc machine with mach-3 for starters. Once I have it working for me i'll be far more motivated to jump into 3d head first and not forget what I learned last week if I'm using it everyday.
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