@cadman777 wrote:
@BDCollett,
I suppose it all boils down to one's perspective and experience.
It's a trinket to me b/c the parts of Inventor that I believe should have been developed have hardly been touched. Some very necessary 'add-ins' have been created by no-names which could have been easily incorporated into Inventor by the developers a long time ago. Yet, they are no where to be found. But instead, Autodesk adds things that only a tiny percent of people would normally use in a production setting, presumably (as always) to catch the eye of prospective customers. The key here is PRODUCTION SETTING.
The fact that they spent most of their development money on AEC (e.g., Revit - a PRODUCTION SETTING) instead of mechanical (i.e., Inventor) for over a decade is proof of that. Let's face it, they invested in Fusion when they could have incorporated that 'tech' into Inventor and made FreeForm a real app that was integrated into Invetor. Fusion vs. Inventor's FreeForm tool, functionality vs. marketing. That comparison says it all.
I'm curious about something:
1. What kind of work do you do in a production setting?
2. Which parts of Inventor do you use day-in-and-day-out?
3. How many years have you used Inventor?
4. What other software do you use regularly in conjunction w/Inventor?
5. What 'improvements' has Autodesk made to Inventor over the course of the years that you use regularly in your production setting?
6. What % increase in production has those tools given you each time the software is 'upgraded'?
Thanx...
I agree with you on some of those points, it would be better to improve existing tools than add new ones sometimes. That doesn't change the fact that it's still a useful tool, even if me or you do not use it or may never need to.
As for your questions, is this a job interview? 😄
I don't think that's really relevant. I can have my opinion just like you; someone using the software 13 years out of date.
I no longer use Inventor in a production environment. I did for 15 years in multiple different industries so the tools I used vastly changed.
I now teach and help people use the tools, so I get to see what people are doing.
There are so many improvements that have helped over the years that it would be hard to list. Going back to Inventor 2010 would feel like going back to the dark ages at this point.