tribby3d said:
Tribby3d is sort of an expensive hobby project at the moment (both in terms of hosting costs and man hours)
I don't doubt it on the hours front. The effort shows.
May I ask the approximate scale of the hosting costs? I've got some software ambitions of my own and that would be useful information for me.
My gut feel on this is that your path might be a free service supported by advertising. Then your primary customers can be students, people on Eng-Tips who discuss these things, and small scale practicing engineers without access to a full blown, plate FEM programs. I don't see that allowing you to quit your day job but, as you say, it might make the project self sustaining.
In offices that do a lot of concrete highrise work, I've seen tools that look like this:
1) For a repeating floor, your run an FEM model to get accurate column loads and moments.
2) You plug the results from that one floor into a big spreadsheet that extrapolates that to the loads on all of your repeating floors.
3) The big spreadsheet designs all of the associated columns and column to slap connections, including punching shear and stud rails.
In this way, one can design all of the columns and column connections for fifteen stories worth of concrete columns in an afternoon.
I mention this because this might represent a path to market for Tribby3d, especially if you could do it more cleanly and more transparently than your typical firm's big spreadsheet. My concern with this, however, is that many firms that do a lot of highrise work like this are likely to already have the big spreadsheet and will likely prefer to use that because they control it and understand it well.