It's not streamlined, fast, or integrated well with other platforms/programs. Most of all, our adjacent consultants need to work in dwg. The whole industry pipeline is built around Autodesk products unfortunately and they own the market
TheFonz
Oh cool. OK, how do we feel about the armed combatants from Yemen repeatedly attacking civilian trade ships not connected to Israel?
Wow. What a great response.
By this logic Lithuania could attack Norwegian trade vessels in the north sea on account of the genocide in Sudan. The logic makes no sense. Any country is entitled to attack any trade ship anywhere to protest genocide?
They are targeting indiscriminately. You might hear otherwise from their statements, but the reality is they don't seem to have capacity to distinguish
Edit: this has happened numerous times and there is plenty of evidence. Sorry it's your heroes commiting atrocities
What about what about what about. One thing does not negate the other.
How do we feel about the Houthis killing civilians on trade vessels not bound for Israel?
I do believe the path to growth is to fail faster. It just sucks when the fail is systemic and drawn out.
Haha I would love to. But I would have to get all my teams - and there are many - to switch. I also tried FreeCAD. It's OK for hobbyists but it's unusable for architecture... C'est la vie
Dems are managing to split the vote all on their own it seems
I like you. This comment gives good for thought. I'm falling asleep but I have some thoughts. Will follow up tomorrow stay tuned
It's Ok for small shops that do local projects. When you start working on large commercial projects you have 4-5 teams (architects, landscape architects, structural engineers, civil engineers, irrigation consultants) with each team involving 7-12 people then the pipeline gets complicated fast. Standardization is the only way to get projects out the door in a timely manner. We're already struggling with in-house autodesk products that already struggle to talk to each other bc autodesk sucks haha