Just close your eyes and imagine how much creativity and productivity could be unleashed if basic CAD was as accessible as a document editor.
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CAD tools (mechanical for starters but EE, aero etc) still exist in the equivalent realm that for programming and software was when you had to pay $$$$ just to access a compiler
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Replying to @starsandrobots
i gotta say, my own experience is 100% to the contrary. i designed legit CNC'd parts first with Sketchup, then taught myself Inventor (lucky to work somewhere that had licenses, but near zero mentorship/guidance). then a string of pirated licenses, then Fusion + Eagle.
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Replying to @pencerw
It’s the “lucky to have free access” followed by “a string of pirated licenses” that I think is both common and where this chain is weak. We need someone to bring in the 2006 iTunes Store to fix the rampant workaround for a lack of a satisfying accessible option.
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Replying to @starsandrobots
i know you've seen the replies already, but Fusion is really impressive and both it and Eagle are virtually or literally free with a ton of online documentation. i would have agreed with you in ~2012, and agreed that HW != SW, but it's remarkably easy to get into today.
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Replying to @pencerw @starsandrobots
There is also
@OnShape. I found it actually even easier to use than Fusion, but I'm afraid they priced themselves out of the low-end market a year or so ago.1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Use our free/maker version
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Great seeing you and @jhirschtick on this thread! So many people have expressed great enthusiasm here about @Onshape. I need to figure out where my Pencil went..
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