Walt,
I do not work for a CAD vendor in any way. I am very much in the same
shoes as you. And while I agree that Copy, Past, Extrude is a piss poor
workflow for using ACAD data to build 3D models, I do see benefit from using
controlled portions in a limited manner. In my case, this just speeds up
the drawing process, but in no way impedes it (hence my question about the
Inventor workflow which, by your description, appears to give the user no
way around it). Not to mention, there is the entire workflow of being able
to bulk convert the DWG files into a native format so that users don't have
to flip-flop back and forth between CAD systems and aren't tempted to keep
using ACAD because it is temporarily more convenient.
Ken
"Walt Jaquith" wrote in message
news:5326051@discussion.autodesk.com...
> and are the individuals using the software properly trained?
Of course not. No one who really understands how the software works wants
to have anything to do with importing legacy DWG stuff to base their models
on. The people who are trying to use this workflow are the poor
unsuspecting saps who don't know any better than to listen to the sales
pitch of marketers like you.
This is pretty funny. We may have found something that you and your
counterparts in Autodesk marketing can agree on. Your living both depends
on selling your software, and people wont buy it unless you tell them they
can import DWG data. Fine, so that's what you tell them. But what you
can't tell them is what it's going to cost them, and you side-skirted that
issue with me, too. I'm aware that there's a workflow, Ken. Inventor has
one, and your brand has one. I have less than no interest in getting into a
discussion with you over which one works best. I'm telling you flatly that
based on all my experience actually using the software and teaching others
to use the software that it's a bad idea. My reasons are in the article.
Walt