DOES AUTODESK FUSION 360 SUPPORT LINUX OS

DOES AUTODESK FUSION 360 SUPPORT LINUX OS

Anonymous
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224 Replies
Message 1 of 225

DOES AUTODESK FUSION 360 SUPPORT LINUX OS

Anonymous
Not applicable

HELLO 

I WOULD LIKE TO DOES AUTODESK FUSION 360 SUPPORT LINUX OS

AND 

WHICH WOULD BE THE BEST PROCSSER FOR FUSION IF I AM HANDELING LARGE CAM AND COMPLEX 3D ASSEMLY

LET ME KNOW

Accepted solutions (2)
116,774 Views
224 Replies
Replies (224)
Message 201 of 225

joao_mamede
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Here comes the Region of Interest (ROI) MS groupie 🙂
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Message 202 of 225

scott.d.gray
Participant
Participant
If we've got to do the finances too, let's just make it a code bounty. I'm
already a paying customer, but I'll gladly kick in another $200 one time
for a native Linux version.
Message 203 of 225

TrippyLighting
Consultant
Consultant

@joao_mamede wrote:
Here comes the Region of Interest (ROI) MS groupie 🙂

Yep, that is certainly a convincing argument 🙄

I can see how the folks at AD get all excited about a Linux version now ...


EESignature

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Message 204 of 225

joao_mamede
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
I don't understand acronyms, is the point. Rules of English say: first time you use one, define it.
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Message 205 of 225

joao_mamede
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
This makes no sense, it takes less money to code in linux than windows, therefore the windows version should be more expensive if we go bean counting.
Message 206 of 225

TrippyLighting
Consultant
Consultant

@joao_mamede wrote:
I don't understand acronyms, is the point. Rules of English say: first time you use one, define it.

Oh, LOL. My bad!

 

ROI in the business world means Return Of Investment.

 

All too often it has to be proven before an investment is made, what the prospective financial gain will be.

The hard numbers for the expenditure are usually easy to calculate based on past experience and data. The guesstimated "numbers" by nature usually are rather vague. In larger organizations that "mindset" often hinders innovation and progress.

 


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Message 207 of 225

TrippyLighting
Consultant
Consultant

@joao_mamede wrote:
This makes no sense, it takes less money to code in linux than windows, therefore the windows version should be more expensive if we go bean counting.

Can you provide some hard data?

Where does that "less expensive" come from?

Less cost in required hardware?

Less cost in required software?

Fewer hours in programing?

 

What is the cost of retraining an entire organization in the use of new development tools?

How long does it take to get into a routine so that work can continue productively?

 

I am looking for hard numbers here, not opinions gathered on Forums discussing these topics with other users who don't have data.

 

It's fun playing the devil's advocate. People are all too eager to assume you have something against... whatever.

 

Just so I can provide a bit of background on where this is coming from. I spent 20  of 30 years of my engineering career developing concepts, budgets, and proposals for large capital equipment projects. When working for companies acquiring equipment I had to provide the justification as well. It is very painful having to argue the merits of an investment with people who have no imagination!

Today I work for a company providing & building that equipment. I don't personally have to worry about the justification process anymore, but I do have to help our customers along that process.

 

It is not us you have to convince. I'd love to see a version for Linux.


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Message 208 of 225

joao_mamede
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
And do you also do power analysis prior to launching in Windows? and ANOVA statistics with multiple column comparison tests?

And, everything is a guess, even for MacosX was. If you never try, you'll never know.

But, why, me a client has to do the financial report for the company? Why are you asking me, a client, to justify my interest in being a client?
Message 209 of 225

etfrench
Mentor
Mentor

@joao_mamede wrote:
And do you also do power analysis prior to launching in Windows? and ANOVA statistics with multiple column comparison tests?

And, everything is a guess, even for MacosX was. If you never try, you'll never know.

But, why, me a client has to do the financial report for the company? Why are you asking me, a client, to justify my interest in being a client?

It should be obvious that Autodesk has done the analysis and found it wasn't worth spending money and resources on developing a Linux version, especially when there are good workarounds. You can find some of those workarounds by reading through the entire thread.

 

You can only hope this will change in the future.

ETFrench

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Message 210 of 225

cryinkfly
Contributor
Contributor

For my part, I have to say, even if there is still no official version of Autodesk Fusion 360 for Linux, my workaround works better and better over time.

 

But that only works because the community supports me and Autodesk itself has contributed a part to the fact that this software largely runs via the cloud and therefore sets fewer requirements in order to be able to use it under Linux with the help of Wine.

 

In addition, this year Autodesk has implemented OpenGL as a graphics driver as an option, so you no longer have to rely on DirectX (DXVK) solutions.

 

Furthermore, you can also see in my project that the list of tested graphics cards is increasing and that the further development of Wine (currently 7.0 rc2), for example the photo-realistic visualization with ray tracing, has improved.

 

In any case, there seems to be a need:

 

traffic-Visitors.png

And people from different companies and universities are also represented in my community.

Message 211 of 225

cryinkfly
Contributor
Contributor

And I'm also already working on getting other Autodesk products (Revit 2022, AutoCAD 2022) to run on Linux.

 

However, these programs are more difficult to get running, unlike Autodesk Fusion 360.

 

AutoCAD2022-Linux.png

Message 212 of 225

barry9UDQ6
Advocate
Advocate

Brilliant Stuff!

I almost exclusively use Fusion and Blender, and Blender (2.9) has been shown to run up to 50% faster on Ubuntu than Windows.

The devs for Fusion have different groups of users all clamoring for their preferred features to be worked on, and of course they can't please everybody. Fusion already offers brilliant bang for your buck, and I think Linux support would be a real asset.

Message 213 of 225

cryinkfly
Contributor
Contributor
Accepted solution

I've released another new update💬

 

With this update I have made some changes to my Setup Wizard for Linux and also added numerous new features. 🙂

 

I'm still working on my own solutions to make Autodesk Fusion 360 more accessible to even more people around the world. For example, I'm working with Vosk on a voice control for Autodesk Fusion 360! 🗣

 

You can watch the video on my YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvBCIKRb_os

Message 214 of 225

cryinkfly
Contributor
Contributor

Greetings to all Autodesk Fusion 360 users 👋,

today I will inform you about the current visitor numbers and thus the interest in Autodesk Fusion 360 under Linux.

 

Because a lot has happened! 👀

 

If I compare the numbers about half a year ago with those of today, then you can see that the numbers have tripled or doubled. 👌

 

Old visitor numbers:

traffic-Visitors.png

 

Current visitor numbers:

Bildschirmfoto_2022-05-06_08-53-39.png

 

Maybe you are interested in the numbers. 🙂

 

Best regards from Germany

 

Steve Zabka

Message 215 of 225

stiller.design
Collaborator
Collaborator
tolle Sache!!! echt eine gute Arbeit. Ich moechte auch gerne auf Linux wecheln. Werde das mal probieren.
Message 216 of 225

Vindix007
Observer
Observer

Captura de tela de 2023-05-20 21-00-09.png

 

Fusion 360 running here perfectly on Arch Linux (using the script made by Cryinkfly).

My specs:

CPU: i5-8600

GPU: RX-550

RAM: 16 GB

Message 217 of 225

timangus
Participant
Participant

Kind of ridiculous that in 2025 this is the only way of running Fusion on Linux. Oh well.

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Message 218 of 225

PeterMoll
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Autodesk, can you please please please start supporting Fusion in Linux, either by making it work properly under wine or making the browser version work properly ( I tried it a couple of times, but it was sloooow and buggy )
I am so so so fed up with having to reboot to Windows only for using Fusion and then, as just now happened again, having to email myself a drawing pdf, rebooting back to Fedora to print it as properly fitting a pdf to paper is broken in Windows.... And please don't start about looking online for help with the printing, I tried everything.... I am not abig customer of yours, but as soon as there is a viable alternative working on Linux I'll jump on that.

 

Regards, Peter

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Message 219 of 225

BASF_Ace
Contributor
Contributor

For real, it's got to the point that Fusion is the only reason I have for keeping a Windows install on my machine. The browser version of Fusion is so slow it's basically unusable. At this rate I'd probably switch as soon as a viable alternative becomes available on Linux.

Message 220 of 225

PeterMoll
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Going to reboot now to Windows to get into Fusion to make a quick pdf and reboot back again to Fedora to prinit it and my normal workflow. Just to let you know.

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