Tmoose
Mechanical
- Apr 12, 2003
- 5,626
We are transitioning to Inventor because ProE/Creo's pricing for multiple seats is nuts. It doesn't help that our local PTC product supporters are so cavalier.
Anyhow, I'm in day 2 of 4 of Inventor essentials training.
First I was struck by how familiar many of the Inventor icons look.
Then the "drawing" paper had a very distinctive and familiar parchment appearance.
Finally some of the commands might as well be SW.. "Pack and go" to save an assembly with all the accouterments so it may be worked on as a stand=alone elsewhere.
I'm reminded that When Cosmos/M was a standalone product the fine print stated something like "Structural Research and Analysis Corporation has some agreement to use ANSYS Input Commands and Command Structure."
Does anyone know if AutoDesk struck a similar deal with Dassault/Solidworks ?
So far the right mouse click functionality of Inventor is quite nice, and perhaps a decade ahead of those old SW commands etc, but I'd bet SW has not stood still in that regard either.
Anyhow, I'm in day 2 of 4 of Inventor essentials training.
First I was struck by how familiar many of the Inventor icons look.
Then the "drawing" paper had a very distinctive and familiar parchment appearance.
Finally some of the commands might as well be SW.. "Pack and go" to save an assembly with all the accouterments so it may be worked on as a stand=alone elsewhere.
I'm reminded that When Cosmos/M was a standalone product the fine print stated something like "Structural Research and Analysis Corporation has some agreement to use ANSYS Input Commands and Command Structure."
Does anyone know if AutoDesk struck a similar deal with Dassault/Solidworks ?
So far the right mouse click functionality of Inventor is quite nice, and perhaps a decade ahead of those old SW commands etc, but I'd bet SW has not stood still in that regard either.