Monday, June 12, 2023

Are You All Talking About Fusion 360, Or OpenSCAD?

Introducing Best 3d Mouse For Fusion 360 Autodesk Student Autocad 2017I still use an old Lightroom 5 on a 2009 Macbook for my photos. It’s not mz main computer and having old OSes is a problem on it’s own, granted. But services just cripple your functionality without you actually doing anything. How well are performance heavy applications, like CAD/CAM packages, doing in this way from your experience? The situation is mostly the same with Inventor, the only difference is that different versions of Inventor have format of the file frozen so it is possible to estimate where the migration will happen.


I’ve done a few 3D designs in the past few months for personal 3d printing - a box and a couple of brackets/stands. It’s not worth paying a cent for this privilege. Just like democracy- FOSS depends on participation of people to work. You’re welcome for all the thought I put into suggestions for your product. As a hobbyist though I just can’t afford to pay hundreds of bucks a year for a subscription. I’ve been using Inventor for 5 years at work now. We tried to switch to Fusion as we use it for CAM for our lathe. I can’t stand fusion compared to Inventor for medling. I'm sure there are a lot of users out there that have had a lot of experience. Tried different types of mice so I'm hoping you folks can provide me with some really good feedback. The 3D connection devices are not a replacement for the mouse. They are a tool for your left hand when using 3D software. Basically it runs your view (rotates / manipulates the 3d object), while you are free to work with your cad tools as usual with the mouse. I can tell you that as a Solidworks user, I can’t imagine not using a 3d mouse device for view control. We have Identical thin client setups one on the LAN where our CAD station is located and one at a remote site. There is some sort of Latency issue with the WAN connection that is all that is left to diagnose as both zero clients are exactly identical in every way and they both connect to the same CAD station. The only wild card is the Network connection. The only problem I have with this mouse now is the fact that it has me discontinued. This mouse has 12 programmable buttons all on the thumb side, but these buttons are designed in such a way that every button has a different shape. The scroll wheel supports smooth and ratcheted movements and you can even set the scrolling resistance in this mouse as per your preference. This has to be the most softball apologetic take on a blatantly anti-consumer, anti-community move by Autodesk. They’ve built a community of enthusiasts for years by opening up parametric CAD to the masses. It’s not like they’re sponsors here; they deserve to be rounded criticized for this unforced move. Just this week, I sent the fusion file for a personal project to a CNC shop for fabrication. Good thing I finished the design this month instead of the next, since they’re yanking all the export options. It was a pain to migrate existing projects from DSM to Fusion 360.


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