Autodesk Fusion is basically a simpler version of Inventor without certain features, a more simple UI and is more "interactive" with certain tools(like fillet). Though, it's pretty neat to use! Sometimes I use it on my laptop when I'm just messing around, since it's a smaller package than Inventor. I use Inventor for more…
I haven't looked into Fusion. My only experience with CAD is with SolidWorks which was awhile back. I was considering Rhino as an option. For Maya I would only use it to do the retopo work then bring it into Painter for baking and texturing, as the low doesn't need to be 100% accurate for what I'm doing as this version is…
It looks nice enough and I'd like to give it a try. but... I'm not sure it really offers anything over fusion360 to justify the price for non-commercial use and you're giving up a bunch of the nice stuff that comes with the autodesk/fusion ecosystem (project management etc.).
With mesh fusion, the clean UI I could quite seriously see modo as the future and leaving autodesk in the dust, right now some aspects are still playing catch up, but its getting there, i'd suggest picking up the basics now while you can.
What CAD Program would you advise? I have used Autodesk Fusion 360 before. MoI3D? / Rhino / Sketchup... So Hardmesh performs worse than Modo Meshfusion since it does quite a nice job of connecting the geometry.
Hello all, I was wondering what the best free software and file format to use for editing 3D scans for export to a 3d Printer. I have a Miraco Revopoint Scanner and I have Autodesk Fusion, Meshmixer, and Blender. But I would like to focus my learning curve on one software because learning all of them at the same time is…
there you go - i didn't know about nuke studios' existence at all. long time since i had an interesting in compositing. if there's only a trial for the autodesk products then that's a least progress ;) but most likely means they're still costing $$$$($). anyway, unfortunately none of these apps are simple nor newbie…
Hmm. I'd say by careful with this kind of announcements, especially when they use the phrasing "you can now use X for free" instead of "X is free". There's probably a catch, like a switch to an always-online model or some kind of backwards way to prevent the user from working locally (like they did with Fusion 360).…
Agreed. It is strange. I don't know - maybe it's because it's primarily for manufacturing and design purposes...? The few I've spoken to on the Autodesk forum don't come from a game development background so some of my approaches/workflows were alien to them? They're very particular about constraining sketches and having…