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Ideally, this forum topic is to discuss the impact of Revit on a Mac, right? I know there is value in adding the VM resolutions, but the fact is that emulates only. It's a great option, for now.
But Revit natively on a Mac would better suit the OS environmental factors, and not split the configurations for display resolutions/graphic cards VRAM and processing power with actually having to initiate a separate environment via VM product. Updates would directly impact your system, single interface instead of making the double assumptions or considerations that the VM supports the updates, and the Mac supports any VM updates influencing the changes. It's great when the VM starts up without issues, then the application starts up, but I've seen demos go sideways when the VM has a hiccup, or cross-interfacing a change in the VM application across the Mac frizzes up the works.
So it would be great, again, if Revit was NATIVELY on the Mac!
These stats are so disingenuous! What's particularly depressing is that some people will look at them and simply say, "Macs are in a tiny minority - fact. Why bother?'. It's not that that is a simplistic analysis, it's a simple-minded one.
Although it's clearly unarguable that Windows has a massively superior market share, it's a 'dumb' stat in that it takes no account of any particular market sector or country. Does it include embedded systems? This sounds ridiculous, but consider that a lot of the market share of Windows phones, surface and Windows RT systems were based on figures that included those manufactured and in stock, not just in use. It's another demonstration of "lies, damned lies and statistics".
For example every small company that buys a computer for every individual secretary/admin person, all the corporations that standardise on Windows, and all the home users that can't afford Macs (particularly in the second and third world) are used to Windows and are worried about the unfamiliarity of switching to a new OS even if they have heard good things about it. My neighbour is a case in point. He has his own small business, Windows based, and he has the common Windows issues of his machine getting slower and slower, Browser hijacks, viruses etc. He knows that the Mac has none of these issues, and that there is some fabulous software for his specialised area, written specifically for the Mac, yet he's reluctant to move away from what he knows on the basis of "better the devil you know".
In particular market sectors (video production for example and graphic design) the Mac has a much, much larger market share. The creative industries generally have a much higher proportion of Macs. There are lots of architecture practices who use nothing but Macs.
Similarly, if you look at universities and computer science labs, the proportion of Linux users will be way higher than 0.95%. Same goes for network administrators.
So please, let's be a little bit more open-minded 🙂
What is the platform split for Autodesk users though? Clearly more people use Windows for day to day tasks, but for design and visualization I'm sure it is quite different than the 93/5/1 split.
I'm not sure what this blurry video actually shows.
1. Is it that Revit is working on a Mac in bootcamp?
2. Is it that Revit is working on a Mac in a virtual machine?
3. Is it that Revit isn't actually working on a Mac?
In the case of 1 that's no use, because you can't use Revit with all the rest of your Mac software, so you can't check your e-mail when your BIM app is running. Alternatively, assuming that Outlook for Windows and Mac are conpatible with the same mail database, you could possibly do this, but you would need to maintain a separate e-mail app. And then you need the Windows stuff like Adobe Reader, PDF creators, zip file managers and all the other utilities. In effect, it's switching to Windows, but using Apple hardware, which for a Mac user, makes no sense.
In the case of 2 - Revit looks to be glacial in terms of speed, which is pretty much what you would expect. Unless you have a high spec mac Pro, you would be stupid to do this.
In the case of 3 - well, draw your own conclusions...
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