Changing CAD systems.
Changing CAD systems.
I'm curious as to what possesses people to decide to change CAD systems. To me the process is extremely painful and the advantages would have to be REALLY significant to make the move.
So for instance in this forum we have people moving from SE to SW and from SW to SE. You can use any system switching as an example but clearly someone along the way in this case decided that one was better than the other and better enough to go thru the pain of switching. Are there specific gains IE one package can do something the current one can't that is very beneficial, maybe moving to the same software that other departments are using or is this one of those "Well that line is moving faster so I'm jumping to that one" type of things?
So for instance in this forum we have people moving from SE to SW and from SW to SE. You can use any system switching as an example but clearly someone along the way in this case decided that one was better than the other and better enough to go thru the pain of switching. Are there specific gains IE one package can do something the current one can't that is very beneficial, maybe moving to the same software that other departments are using or is this one of those "Well that line is moving faster so I'm jumping to that one" type of things?
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
It's called looking ahead. If you're riding a train that is already suffering from a lack of maintenance and corporate TLC, and you see a cliff coming up.....it might be time to jump. The only question is when. It really doesn't matter how many people are on the train, when the fecal matter contacts the revolving blade they'll have to get off too.
It doesn't take a crystal ball to see the not-so-distant future of Solidworks Desktop.
It doesn't take a crystal ball to see the not-so-distant future of Solidworks Desktop.
He that finds his life will lose it, and he who loses his life for [Christ's] sake will find it. Matt. 10:39
Re: Changing CAD systems.
I tend to agree, but then why would some people be moving towards SW?mike miller wrote: ↑Mon Jun 28, 2021 1:44 pm It's called looking ahead. If you're riding a train that is already suffering from a lack of maintenance and corporate TLC, and you see a cliff coming up.....it might be time to jump. The only question is when. It really doesn't matter how many people are on the train, when the fecal matter contacts the revolving blade they'll have to get off too.
It doesn't take a crystal ball to see the not-so-distant future of Solidworks Desktop.
Re: Changing CAD systems.
There are a lot of factors in SW's favor, such as a larger user base, bigger marketing presence, ubiquitous in schools and training programs. And when companies merge, and they have different systems, someone has to change.
I think you have to look at not only the products, and the public reputation, but also the parent companies, and the history of decisions they've made. A company that isn't really aware of what's been going on the last 15 years might make a choice in favor of a more glamourous product. I know if I had to purchase one for a company to use for the next 10 years or more, the choice would be easy.
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
Brand recongition is the primary driver. Next would be the "safety in numbers" factor. Lastly, people tend not to do benchmarks anymore because you have "all the data" online now!
Take those 3 factors out, evaluate company strategies, really see who is driving technology in the design world and you might find yourself asking the same question of others.
Re: Changing CAD systems.
That is how we ended up where we are. I had never used SW, but I knew NX was out of our budget. Others in the company had used it, and it was the defacto industry standard. Even if I knew that SE was better (which I didn't at the time) there was a lot of inertia pushing us to SW. And as recently as 2018 I probably would have said it was a good decision.
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I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
Re: Changing CAD systems.
Your initial statement is very true. The change can be painful. So why, go through the change at all? That's a health question..here it is a business health question.
This rapid pace of change has already surpassed the business' ability to adapt and change. There is no doubt about that. The next logical question is when and what do I change so that I can see my organization still doing business (competively) in the next 5-10 years.
Then you can ask yourself what tools are available to make the change less painful (not painless). How can I "future-proof" my data so that it can be used and leveraged by others and make it easier to move to the next system..always, always, "have an out" for your data!
PDM used to be painful, then PLM was painful and could be lethal if not managed and implemented correctly. But over the last 20+ years these tools have changed and are less painful. The painful part is the self-assemement and business mapping you have to do while implementing these types of systems.
CAD is a tool. That has been the mantra for years now...but really it is the CAD data that drives the business. You need tools that allow you to enrich and reuse your data- 3D models and all that metadata associated to the model. If you are not seeing your software partner bring you these tools then you really should be looking elsewhere. 3D models need to be enriched, the data can then be pulled out or accessed using other software tools and then data is used downstream or to help you make smart decisions now.
@matt knows I could go on and on about this topic.
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
There's a bunch of motives that can cause people to change CAD Systems.
For instance, we decided to move from AutoCAD 2000 to a 3D program, the main reasons were the following.
Now, we're on SolidWorks, if we were to move to a different program eventually, the main reasons would most likely be lack of reliability from the program, lack of direction, lack of support, and again, the program becoming obsolete.
I wouldn't be surprised for the company to hold off on the upgrading until Windows 10 becomes obsolete lol
For instance, we decided to move from AutoCAD 2000 to a 3D program, the main reasons were the following.
- AutoCAD 2000 was getting closer to becoming obsolete
- We wanted to accelerate drawing production to increase our production output
- We also wanted to reduce the risk of errors both for the draftsman and the production line
Now, we're on SolidWorks, if we were to move to a different program eventually, the main reasons would most likely be lack of reliability from the program, lack of direction, lack of support, and again, the program becoming obsolete.
I wouldn't be surprised for the company to hold off on the upgrading until Windows 10 becomes obsolete lol
Re: Changing CAD systems.
We wanted PDM and thought it would justify the change. At this point in the process I'd say we were wrong. Remodeling all the CAD data is so terribly expensive. Being convinced that we could use dumb solids compounded the expense as now we are rebuilding assemblies and fixing drawings due to replacing dumb, imported, solids with real models. I suppose many companies don't need their old files, for them CAD really is just a tool and can switch more easily.MJuric wrote: ↑Mon Jun 28, 2021 1:32 pm I'm curious as to what possesses people to decide to change CAD systems. To me the process is extremely painful and the advantages would have to be REALLY significant to make the move.
So for instance in this forum we have people moving from SE to SW and from SW to SE. You can use any system switching as an example but clearly someone along the way in this case decided that one was better than the other and better enough to go thru the pain of switching. Are there specific gains IE one package can do something the current one can't that is very beneficial, maybe moving to the same software that other departments are using or is this one of those "Well that line is moving faster so I'm jumping to that one" type of things?
Re: Changing CAD systems.
ugh. I'm going to get jumped on here, but that's ok. Probably good, they can correct me.
Well there's Teamcenter, which contains PDM and some portion of every other three letter business management acronym. The price tag is... well we never could understand exactly what it would cost us to just manage data, be that us or the SE VAR at the time I don't know...
Previously there was, what did they call it?... Something based on SharePoint. I don't know, we never jumped onto that. We looked at it back around 2017. I'm very glad we didn't try to implement it because a few years ago it was disbanded and SE told customers they would need to buy Teamcenter ($x10 give or take) for the same functionality. This was due to SharePoint community going away if I understood correctly.
Now they have BiDM (Built in Data Management) if I'm not mistaken it does not use a database and the metadata is all on the file. File indexing is all done through Windows Indexing service. That was an awkward conversation when I asked IT about moving all of our CAD files from the NetApp file share to a Windows share...
Thing is we just didn't trust them to not keep mucking around with it from one release to another, we favor stability over disruptions when it comes to our product data. Sad thing is we may have jumped from the kettle into the fire...
Re: Changing CAD systems.
Well the good thing is that you will get absolutely no mucking around with SW.....they don't fix a damn thing
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
They have a decent Document Management that runs on Windows Explorer. If you want summat more.....Teamcenter Rapid Start. Seriously. It's not as bad as you think. TC-RS has full TC capability but much more of a plug-and-play procedure (experience? ).
The install pricing for TC-RS is about 30-40% higher than a third party but year over year is actually a few bucks less (not counting the SQL licensing).
He that finds his life will lose it, and he who loses his life for [Christ's] sake will find it. Matt. 10:39
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
We went from Catia V4 to SolidWorks in '98. Reasons.....mostly cost. For 5 seats of Catia v4 we could by 25 SolidWorks so all of engineering could use it and not just the drafters. 1 Catia seat was shared amongst the engineers. Also, the IBM AIX(Unix) workstations cost like $25,000 each.
So we started an evaluation of SolidWorks, Solid Edge, Mechanical Desktop, and Pro/E. We got trials of each software and built an assembly of our product. PTC made one of us go through training before giving us a copy. It was thrown out early for cost and difficulty to use. MDT was thrown out for really lagging behind the others on functionality, even though Autodesk was almost giving it away.
It came down to Works and Edge and at the end of the trial if was pretty much the flip of a coin for us. We liked SE sheet metal and we liked SWX assemblies. In the end it came down to SolidWorks just felt snappier than Solid Edge and a little smoother. We also like that Works didn't try to "walk" you through the steps so model creation felt faster with less steps. So that's how it went down.
In today's world, I wouldn't recommend switching between SolidWorks, Solid Edge, or IV for most common tasks. They are all so close in functionality I don't believe you will see a huge gain and instead will have a lot of pain. If we did mostly edits to imported models all day, I would consider SE, but imported models edits are rare for us so SWX is fine. If you had IV I might say switch due to cost over time as they are subscription only now, so there may be an ROI there.
So we started an evaluation of SolidWorks, Solid Edge, Mechanical Desktop, and Pro/E. We got trials of each software and built an assembly of our product. PTC made one of us go through training before giving us a copy. It was thrown out early for cost and difficulty to use. MDT was thrown out for really lagging behind the others on functionality, even though Autodesk was almost giving it away.
It came down to Works and Edge and at the end of the trial if was pretty much the flip of a coin for us. We liked SE sheet metal and we liked SWX assemblies. In the end it came down to SolidWorks just felt snappier than Solid Edge and a little smoother. We also like that Works didn't try to "walk" you through the steps so model creation felt faster with less steps. So that's how it went down.
In today's world, I wouldn't recommend switching between SolidWorks, Solid Edge, or IV for most common tasks. They are all so close in functionality I don't believe you will see a huge gain and instead will have a lot of pain. If we did mostly edits to imported models all day, I would consider SE, but imported models edits are rare for us so SWX is fine. If you had IV I might say switch due to cost over time as they are subscription only now, so there may be an ROI there.
Jason
Re: Changing CAD systems.
If you look at the numbers it takes a LONG time to "Pay more" and it really depends on what level of the other packages you're using. IV offers one package that is somewhere between Professional and premium in function. However it has no up front expenditure because it is subscription only. Last time I looked I think the difference in annual maintenance was something like 2-$300 dollars between SWX and IV. So you spend 5-7K up front with SWX and then pay $200 less a year...well, long payback.jcapriotti wrote: ↑Mon Jun 28, 2021 5:19 pm If you had IV I might say switch due to cost over time as they are subscription only now, so there may be an ROI there.
OTOH if you're only using standard you pay 4K up front and have an annual payment almost 1K a year cheaper so the payback is pretty quick, but the up front capital payment is still painful.
Re: Changing CAD systems.
You mean Teamcenter X now. PLM in the cloud with a quick setup.mike miller wrote: ↑Mon Jun 28, 2021 3:56 pm They have a decent Document Management that runs on Windows Explorer. If you want summat more.....Teamcenter Rapid Start. Seriously. It's not as bad as you think. TC-RS has full TC capability but much more of a plug-and-play procedure (experience? ).
The install pricing for TC-RS is about 30-40% higher than a third party but year over year is actually a few bucks less (not counting the SQL licensing).
The history of PDM solutions started with 2 different paths...there was the Solid Edge (we are going to be an independent tool) path and then the Solid Edge (management saying, no you are not path). Then you had SQL say: "Sorry to everyone using SQL Express. You need to change." SE needed to pick a path and SharePoint was the next big "platform" of choice. Then Microsoft decided to take SharePoint in a bit of a different direction (Teams).
So to be honest, I have to give Siemens and the Solid Edge kudos for being able to quickly adapt to the changes caused by the underlining tool (SQL and SharePoint).
These days there are still 2 paths to follow for data management for Solid Edge. There is the no-cost MS based tool that acts pretty much just like PDM Pro without the overhead and licensing costs (will be interesting to see if this works with Windows 11!). Next is the Teamcenter route. To be honest, I'd go the Teamcenter route- more specifically the Teamcenter X route! Temacenter has been the most stable direction and it is continually updated to keep up with technology. Heck, Siemens even used their low-code tool Mendex and ported the traditional server-based Teamcenter to the cloud in under a year (as I recall). Now we have Teamcenter X. Just goes to show that with proper strategy, planning and execution you can bring your customers along with you as technology changes..I don't think you can say that of Dassault Systems..sorry to say that but look at its history...
Re: Changing CAD systems.
I've seen more than a few CAD switches driven by managers that liked their last job's CAD. That, and scleraotic, overly-vocal, underly-talented users that prefer one devil to the next.
For 96.83% of firms, you could throw SW, SE, Inventor, and Creo in a hat, pick one, and be just fine.
For 96.83% of firms, you could throw SW, SE, Inventor, and Creo in a hat, pick one, and be just fine.
Re: Changing CAD systems.
Thank you Ry-guy for the clarifying background.Ry-guy wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 10:29 am You mean Teamcenter X now. PLM in the cloud with a quick setup.
The history of PDM solutions started with 2 different paths...there was the Solid Edge (we are going to be an independent tool) path and then the Solid Edge (management saying, no you are not path). Then you had SQL say: "Sorry to everyone using SQL Express. You need to change." SE needed to pick a path and SharePoint was the next big "platform" of choice. Then Microsoft decided to take SharePoint in a bit of a different direction (Teams).
So to be honest, I have to give Siemens and the Solid Edge kudos for being able to quickly adapt to the changes caused by the underlining tool (SQL and SharePoint).
These days there are still 2 paths to follow for data management for Solid Edge. There is the no-cost MS based tool that acts pretty much just like PDM Pro without the overhead and licensing costs (will be interesting to see if this works with Windows 11!). Next is the Teamcenter route. To be honest, I'd go the Teamcenter route- more specifically the Teamcenter X route! Temacenter has been the most stable direction and it is continually updated to keep up with technology. Heck, Siemens even used their low-code tool Mendex and ported the traditional server-based Teamcenter to the cloud in under a year (as I recall). Now we have Teamcenter X. Just goes to show that with proper strategy, planning and execution you can bring your customers along with you as technology changes..I don't think you can say that of Dassault Systems..sorry to say that but look at its history...
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
That's if you are comparing IV to SWX Premium. IV no longer offers packages comparable to SWX Standard and Pro. We have mostly Standard licenses with a few Pro and 1 Premium.MJuric wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 8:17 am If you look at the numbers it takes a LONG time to "Pay more" and it really depends on what level of the other packages you're using. IV offers one package that is somewhere between Professional and premium in function. However it has no up front expenditure because it is subscription only. Last time I looked I think the difference in annual maintenance was something like 2-$300 dollars between SWX and IV. So you spend 5-7K up front with SWX and then pay $200 less a year...well, long payback.
Inventor becomes more expensive:
For "SWX Standard", after 5 years
For "SWX Pro", after 6 years
For "SWX Prem", after forever (Their annual cost is almost the same so it's 40 years)
But the real factor in a larger installation is the fact that IV is named user license vs SolidWorks which has floating concurrent licensing. Our 50 SolidWorks licenses would jump to 150 IV licenses. Now IV is way more expensive, like 3x the annual cost of Swx Premium.
Jason
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
Sorry man, BiDM in Sold Edge is no where, I repeat, no where near PDM Pro. It is very basic, more so than even PDM standard. You can't create data cards, all data must be stored in custom properties and then indexed by the server. It has basic states, you can create multiple workflows. Its simple and look nice for a very small operation but it's missing a huge amount of what PDM Pro is capable of.
The Teamcenter stuff looks interesting but how hard it is to setup? After seeing Windchill, I would have concerns that TC is similar and you would need to be a web developer to configure it. Seems very hard to find information online about it.
Jason
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
It's true that change for the sake of change is a bad idea, but you also have to weigh your long term options. The SWX desktop train is headed for a cliff by all appearances. Sooo.....do you jump now or jump later?HerrTick wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 11:18 am I've seen more than a few CAD switches driven by managers that liked their last job's CAD. That, and scleraotic, overly-vocal, underly-talented users that prefer one devil to the next.
For 96.83% of firms, you could throw SW, SE, Inventor, and Creo in a hat, pick one, and be just fine.
Personally, I'd rather step off on a well-planned schedule in the near future and avoid the death throes and eventual rigor mortis because of the lack of actual maintenance and bug fixes. Maybe we're already there- I sure don't see the value in paying ~$2K per seat per year for the privilege of Beta testing.
He that finds his life will lose it, and he who loses his life for [Christ's] sake will find it. Matt. 10:39
Re: Changing CAD systems.
I remember you mentioning that before. Did Adesk actually tell you this? I'm just curious because that seems like a really bad business model. I've read several things about "Monitoring usage and adjusting number of seats", which you couldn't do if you can only have one seat one person unless you just take away access from someone. Also this...jcapriotti wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 11:53 am But the real factor in a larger installation is the fact that IV is named user license vs SolidWorks which has floating concurrent licensing. Our 50 SolidWorks licenses would jump to 150 IV licenses. Now IV is way more expensive, like 3x the annual cost of Swx Premium.
There are two ways to have multiple users on one product subscription:
Add seats to a subscription with single-user access
A subscription with single-user access is a stand-alone license. To add seats, purchase additional stand-alone licenses through your Autodesk Account. Licenses can't be shared, but each user can download and install the software on up to three devices. For more information, see Add seats in Autodesk Account.
Note: This option is not available if your Autodesk products are purchased though our partner Digital River.
Get a subscription with multi-user access
A subscription with multi-user access is a network license. If you need to share licenses, you can assign seats through a network license server. Purchase subscriptions with multi-user access from an Autodesk sales representative or an authorized reseller.
https://knowledge.autodesk.com/search-r ... ption.html
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
Not sure, maybe its changed since we were told. We only had a few IV licenses but we were offered a 2 for 1 deal where we would get double the licenses for the same cost as our current number of users needed.MJuric wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 12:15 pm I remember you mentioning that before. Did Adesk actually tell you this? I'm just curious because that seems like a really bad business model. I've read several things about "Monitoring usage and adjusting number of seats", which you couldn't do if you can only have one seat one person unless you just take away access from someone. Also this...
There are two ways to have multiple users on one product subscription:
Add seats to a subscription with single-user access
A subscription with single-user access is a stand-alone license. To add seats, purchase additional stand-alone licenses through your Autodesk Account. Licenses can't be shared, but each user can download and install the software on up to three devices. For more information, see Add seats in Autodesk Account.
Note: This option is not available if your Autodesk products are purchased though our partner Digital River.
Get a subscription with multi-user access
A subscription with multi-user access is a network license. If you need to share licenses, you can assign seats through a network license server. Purchase subscriptions with multi-user access from an Autodesk sales representative or an authorized reseller.
https://knowledge.autodesk.com/search-r ... ption.html
I found this:
https://www.autodesk.com/licensing/overview
Licenses available on an Autodesk Plan
Looking for an Autodesk license? We’re retiring licenses based on serial numbers and assigning each subscription to a named user. These new plans provide a range of capabilities for organizations of every size.
Maintenance plans will retire on May 7, 2021 and multi-user subscriptions will retire on August 7, 2022. If you are still on a maintenance plan or multi-user subscription, choose a trade-in offer.
Instead of a serial number, we make it easy to access your subscriptions. Admins assign subscriptions to their users with Autodesk Account. Users then access their products by signing in. Get help with account management.
Jason
Re: Changing CAD systems.
I read that the last time we talked about this. At very least license usage seems very murky. They are definitely retiring the old "Floating" type license but I'm not sure that that means there are no options available to allow multiple people to use the same license.jcapriotti wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 12:28 pm Not sure, maybe its changed since we were told. We only had a few IV licenses but we were offered a 2 for 1 deal where we would get double the licenses for the same cost as our current number of users needed.
I found this:
https://www.autodesk.com/licensing/overview
Licenses available on an Autodesk Plan
Looking for an Autodesk license? We’re retiring licenses based on serial numbers and assigning each subscription to a named user. These new plans provide a range of capabilities for organizations of every size.
Maintenance plans will retire on May 7, 2021 and multi-user subscriptions will retire on August 7, 2022. If you are still on a maintenance plan or multi-user subscription, choose a trade-in offer.
Instead of a serial number, we make it easy to access your subscriptions. Admins assign subscriptions to their users with Autodesk Account. Users then access their products by signing in. Get help with account management.
Edit to add: and on a bigger note, are people just completely losing the ability to communicate? SW with their 3DE/SwYm stuff is exasperatingly confusing. Adesk is certainly not making it clear here. I can't tell you how many manuals, guides etc that I have read over the last few years that I'm left thinking "Was that even in English" after I read it.
And no it's not me. I can pick up a manual, guide, instructions etc from 20 years ago and read it very clearly...in most cases.
Re: Changing CAD systems.
I was looking at SE in 2019, and one of the things that stopped that investigation early was the lack of an equivalent to the solidworks "internet license." I work from home at least 1 day a week, so a licensing option that allows me to access from 2 different locations is just about a must.
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I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be. -Douglas Adams
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
Yeah, its called, have the administrator login to the website and change the user to another user that needs the software. I have to do this with Matlab, stinks.MJuric wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 12:30 pm I read that the last time we talked about this. At very least license usage seems very murky. They are definitely retiring the old "Floating" type license but I'm not sure that that means there are no options available to allow multiple people to use the same license.
I think it's the flood of outsourcing to countries where English is a second language. I imagine if I wrote instructions in some other language I don't speak daily, its would be less than correct.MJuric wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 12:30 pm Edit to add: and on a bigger note, are people just completely losing the ability to communicate? SW with their 3DE/SwYm stuff is exasperatingly confusing. Adesk is certainly not making it clear here. I can't tell you how many manuals, guides etc that I have read over the last few years that I'm left thinking "Was that even in English" after I read it.
And no it's not me. I can pick up a manual, guide, instructions etc from 20 years ago and read it very clearly...in most cases.
Jason
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
SE doesn't have the "Borrow License" feature either?SPerman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 12:47 pm I was looking at SE in 2019, and one of the things that stopped that investigation early was the lack of an equivalent to the solidworks "internet license." I work from home at least 1 day a week, so a licensing option that allows me to access from 2 different locations is just about a must.
"On the days when I keep my gratitude higher than my expectations, well, I have really good days."
Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
Ray Wylie Hubbard in his song "Mother Blues"
Re: Changing CAD systems.
Well DS is a French company, maybe that explains the complete and utter confusion surrounding 3DE and names.jcapriotti wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 1:03 pm I think it's the flood of outsourcing to countries where English is a second language. I imagine if I wrote instructions in some other language I don't speak daily, its would be less than correct.
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
Yeah, when I started using Catia V4 after using AutoCAD, I was like, where are the Move and Copy commands? Oh, select "Transfor" then "Translate".
Then Replace (to move) or Duplicate (to copy)
This in 97....... Looked so much better than....this
Jason
Re: Changing CAD systems.
My kid when he was young said "Last Day" and "Next Day" so "Re-Place" makes complete sense to me. I mean your placing it again....just somewhere else.
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Re: Changing CAD systems.
So when my wife asks me to move the sofa, she really means replace it......ah ha.
Jason
Re: Changing CAD systems.
I wish they would replace me...jcapriotti wrote: ↑Tue Jun 29, 2021 5:55 pm So when my wife asks me to move the sofa, she really means replace it......ah ha.