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@Alfred.NESWADBA wrote:Hi,
>> I let AutoCAD perform its own optimization when it was installed, so if it is improper, it's its own fault.
That's sounds like "dear AutoCAD, do the magic things to get my hardware and my operating system I have setup up and my other applications (which I installed with there other dll's) working ..."
That's not the way you'll get AutoCAD working better (or any other software). Compare it to buy a car ... and now it's the car's problem/job to get fuel
As others stated it's never good to crash, so if you crash multiple times a day than I can feel your disappointment.
But nothing to do against that crashes (thinking AutoCAD should heal itself and your complete system) is not the way I can agree to.
And I'm quite sure that you can get your AutoCAD working, but following some rules about "how to use AutoCAD", "how to learn to avoid errors out of experience when the crashes happen" and "how to setup your system and handle additional program installations as well as updating(or not) your drivers". (e.g. how often do you restart AutoCAD during the working day?)
I'm also quite sure that not all users out there crash multiple times a day ... otherweise this forum here would have >50 mio forum users, all sending messages about crashes.
Try to isolate when the problem(s) appear, if they are drawing dependend, or happens with some specific commands, objects, materials, network files, ... if you tell us such info's we might be able to help.
If you say you don't have time to investigate in error-catching you have to live with erros (like no time to take fuel for the car).
Hope to hear from you ... - alfred -
Having a car get its own fuel is a little different than this, I think a closer analogy would the car doesn't know when to fire what cylinder and its my job now to go in and get everything re-timed. I don't quite understand how so many people defend autocad religiously when it performs like this. You say I should have to run all these optimization routes, but I don't have a degree in computer science, and CAD has been around for almost 35 years, I think they should have those bugs worked out. Other programs I install, I don't need to "optimize" them; MS Office just works, my video editor just works, Bluebeam, Adobe, Scaffold Designer, Mozilla, Internet Explorer, etc. etc. etc, all just work fine without me having to dig into all the different settings. If all those software manufacturers can create a program that can work for a regular old user like me, why can't Autodesk?