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John Connor
Senior Member Joined: 01.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD 2018 Status: Offline Points: 7175 |
Posted: 04.Feb.2011 at 16:12 |
Speculation? Maybe you can use that vast knowledge of yours to enlighten the people over at AutoDesk then. First start with this link re: 3ds Max and look right under where it says Autodesk 3ds Max Products.
Note how it mentions powerful 3D rendering capabilities and read what it also says about shading and texturing.
Then take yourself over to the page for Inventor and look where it says Autodesk Inventor Products. Note that it says nothing about using Inventor for architectural design while going on to mention mechanical design for example.
I see you do not have the courage to stand behind your statements. The challenge still remains. Post the exact same question, word for word, at all of the AutoCAD help sites I mentioned above and let the users respond. I'll check each one and after a week I'll come back here and post the results. If I am wrong I'll admit it. $100 says I'm right. Put up or shut up.
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"Humans have a strength that cannot be measured. This is John Connor. If you are reading this, you are the resistance."
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tulip3D
Senior Member Joined: 23.Jul.2009 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD2011, Inventor2011 Status: Offline Points: 427 |
Posted: 04.Feb.2011 at 16:19 |
You never used ANYTHING other than acad. You said so yourself. Give the poor OP facts. Not what you read off the internet. put up or shut up? what are you some sort of sissy azz CAD ganster? Take that to another site, terminator. |
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John Connor
Senior Member Joined: 01.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD 2018 Status: Offline Points: 7175 |
Posted: 04.Feb.2011 at 16:28 |
Just as I thought. No spine. Not willing to let your peers cast their own votes? Not too sure they'll come through for you? If you are the one posting the question then I cannot influence the results. What could be more fair? Why not post one of your 3D architectural visualizations created with Inventor? We can all be amazed at your prowess. Karl...it's all your decision. Makes no never-mind to me.
Peace out. Edited by John Connor - 05.Feb.2011 at 13:10 |
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"Humans have a strength that cannot be measured. This is John Connor. If you are reading this, you are the resistance."
<<AutoCAD 2015>> |
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Cad64
Senior Member Joined: 17.Apr.2010 Location: United States Using: Autocad 2011, 3DS Max 2011, Photoshop CS5 Status: Offline Points: 491 |
Posted: 04.Feb.2011 at 16:36 |
I've never heard anyone talk about using Inventor for architectural renderings before. In fact, every image I've seen online, of projects done in Inventor, have been some sort of mechanical device, cars, motorcycles, equipment, etc. Do you have any examples of architectural renderings that you can point me to? I would like to see the quality and see how it compares to Max. For my money, Max beats all other programs for high end photo realistic architectural rendering, hands down. But I always like to see what other programs can do.
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Online Portfolio: http://www.rdeweese.com/
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HAWDesigner
Senior Member Joined: 04.Aug.2008 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD R14, AutoCAD 2009, AutoCAD 2010 Status: Offline Points: 310 |
Posted: 05.Feb.2011 at 16:06 |
karlt83, REVIT is what you need, don't waste your time on anything else. The name of the software is Autodesk Revit Architecture for a reason.
As far as learning goes, you might be better off taking a formal class on the subject. I think this would probably be the quickest and easiest way. Or, you can google "revit tutorials" and start there. Good Luck!! Edited by HAWDesigner - 05.Feb.2011 at 16:07 |
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R. Williams AutoCAD 2010 Certified Professional <!-- If all else fails hit F1 --> <<AutoCAD 2009 |
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Quagga
Newbie Joined: 25.Aug.2010 Location: United Kingdom Using: autocad 2012, inventor 2012, solidworks 2011 Status: Offline Points: 8 |
Posted: 16.Feb.2011 at 12:14 |
I would try Revit Architecture, not thst much of a learnig curve, if you are allready in this field. I had no trouble with the basic's, and I came from the mechanical side, i.e. Acad. and Inventor.
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