• Sketchup: Making friends with "Follow me"

    From Puckdropper@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 17 06:06:54 2023
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure what
    I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for adding
    profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in figuring out
    how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time manually mitering
    a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line by
    line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my preferred
    method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on. It
    should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select the
    face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until your extrusion
    is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude on,
    then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you want to
    extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same component.
    If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude along the lines
    of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Tue Jan 17 02:29:50 2023
    On 1/17/2023 1:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    "Layers" are very nice. I recall that feature better than "follow me".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Leon on Tue Jan 17 10:35:00 2023
    On 1/17/2023 10:20 AM, Leon wrote:
    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure what
    I was going to get.  I think I get it now, and it's awesome for adding
    profiles around things.  One of the places it excels is in figuring out
    how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time manually mitering
    a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line by
    line and selecting all at once.  Selecting all at once is my preferred
    method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on.  It
    should be a single face and make contact with the line.  It should be
    perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select the
    face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to extrude on.
    Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until your extrusion
    is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude on,
    then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you want to
    extrude.  It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same component.
    If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude along the lines
    of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool had
    documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out.  Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the basics are covered.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates, maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing.   Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show.   Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the same drawing.   Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a different Layer/Tag.   I can look at any number of cabinets or just one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time if
    both are visible.   Your editing will be added to only the currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under the hierarchy of a specific tag.   For example I have 5 cabinets each on their  specific Layer/Tag.   Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate Layer/Tags
    for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to  turn off every thing that is not assigned
    to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet for viewing
    or editing.



    A Sketchup Tag Folder Video.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luMQqbfFwK8

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Tue Jan 17 10:20:03 2023
    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure what
    I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in figuring out
    how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time manually mitering
    a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line by
    line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on. It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select the
    face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until your extrusion
    is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude on,
    then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same component.
    If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude along the lines
    of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the
    basics are covered.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates, maybe
    more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a different
    Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time if
    both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the currently
    selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each on
    their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put each
    cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate Layer/Tags
    for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not assigned
    to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet for viewing
    or editing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Puckdropper@21:1/5 to Leon on Wed Jan 18 09:50:39 2023
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure
    what I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for
    adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in
    figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time
    manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line
    by line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on.
    It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should
    be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select
    the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until
    your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude
    on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you
    want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude
    along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool
    had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the
    basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it. It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0. No geometry should ever be on a layer. Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just
    one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time
    if both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under
    the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each
    on their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put
    each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively
    online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Wed Jan 18 18:58:52 2023
    On 1/18/2023 4:50 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure
    what I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for
    adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in
    figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time
    manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line
    by line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on.
    It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should
    be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select
    the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until
    your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude
    on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you
    want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude
    along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool
    had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the
    basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it. It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0. No geometry should ever be on a layer. Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just
    one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time
    if both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under
    the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each
    on their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put
    each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    Puckdropper


    Puckdropper, I may have a copy of the free install program from when
    SketchUp was owned by Google, before it was sold to Trimble. I believe
    it is from around 2008. I last installed it on Windows 7, but SU still
    runs on Windows 10 after my upgrade. Let me know if you are interested.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to Bill on Wed Jan 18 20:50:08 2023
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 18:58:52 -0500, Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote:

    On 1/18/2023 4:50 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure
    what I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for
    adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in
    figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time
    manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line
    by line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on.
    It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should
    be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select
    the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until
    your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude
    on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you
    want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude
    along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool
    had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the
    basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it. It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0. No geometry should ever be on a layer.
    Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just
    one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time
    if both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under
    the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each
    on their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put
    each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively
    online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    Puckdropper


    Puckdropper, I may have a copy of the free install program from when
    SketchUp was owned by Google, before it was sold to Trimble. I believe
    it is from around 2008. I last installed it on Windows 7, but SU still
    runs on Windows 10 after my upgrade. Let me know if you are interested.

    The 2017 version still works. I've been using it since, well, 2017.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 18 20:48:47 2023
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in >news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure
    what I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for
    adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in
    figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time
    manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line
    by line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on.
    It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should
    be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select
    the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until
    your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude
    on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you
    want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude
    along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool
    had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the
    basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it. It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.

    I use it constantly. I have a cheap PC and a 55" TV on the wall
    (sorta) over my TS. I display the components of project, with
    dimensions, on the screen while I work.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0. No geometry should ever be on a layer. >Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just
    one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time
    if both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under
    the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each
    on their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put
    each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't
    all that expensive.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Wed Jan 18 23:28:39 2023
    On 1/18/2023 8:50 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 18:58:52 -0500, Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote:

    On 1/18/2023 4:50 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure >>>>> what I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for >>>>> adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in
    figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time
    manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line >>>>> by line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on. >>>>> It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should >>>>> be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select
    the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until >>>>> your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude
    on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you
    want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude >>>>> along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool >>>>> had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the >>>> basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it. It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0. No geometry should ever be on a layer.
    Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just
    one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time
    if both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under
    the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each
    on their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put
    each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively
    online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    Puckdropper


    Puckdropper, I may have a copy of the free install program from when
    SketchUp was owned by Google, before it was sold to Trimble. I believe
    it is from around 2008. I last installed it on Windows 7, but SU still
    runs on Windows 10 after my upgrade. Let me know if you are interested.

    The 2017 version still works. I've been using it since, well, 2017.

    If its the Trimble version it works with more handicaps than the free
    Google version. The last time I tried the free version it didn't support "labels", for instance, which were essential to what I wanted to do.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Puckdropper@21:1/5 to Bill on Thu Jan 19 11:15:28 2023
    Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote in news:XF3yL.61797$5S78.11823@fx48.iad:

    On 1/18/2023 8:50 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 18:58:52 -0500, Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote:

    Puckdropper, I may have a copy of the free install program from when
    SketchUp was owned by Google, before it was sold to Trimble. I
    believe it is from around 2008. I last installed it on Windows 7,
    but SU still runs on Windows 10 after my upgrade. Let me know if you
    are interested.

    The 2017 version still works. I've been using it since, well, 2017.

    If its the Trimble version it works with more handicaps than the free
    Google version. The last time I tried the free version it didn't
    support "labels", for instance, which were essential to what I wanted
    to do.


    I appreciate the offer, I've got install files for Sketchup 8. I spent a
    long time on Sketchup 8 and finally moved to Sketchup 2017 for better
    plugin support. The solid modeler (drawing) is pretty much the same, which sucks because it needs some fixes. (ROUND circles? What's that?)

    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Puckdropper@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Thu Jan 19 11:26:38 2023
    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com:

    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions. >>Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >>online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't
    all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever." https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Thu Jan 19 09:40:21 2023
    On 1/19/2023 5:15 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote in news:XF3yL.61797$5S78.11823@fx48.iad:

    On 1/18/2023 8:50 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 18:58:52 -0500, Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote:

    Puckdropper, I may have a copy of the free install program from when
    SketchUp was owned by Google, before it was sold to Trimble. I
    believe it is from around 2008. I last installed it on Windows 7,
    but SU still runs on Windows 10 after my upgrade. Let me know if you
    are interested.

    The 2017 version still works. I've been using it since, well, 2017.

    If its the Trimble version it works with more handicaps than the free
    Google version. The last time I tried the free version it didn't
    support "labels", for instance, which were essential to what I wanted
    to do.


    I appreciate the offer, I've got install files for Sketchup 8. I spent a long time on Sketchup 8 and finally moved to Sketchup 2017 for better
    plugin support. The solid modeler (drawing) is pretty much the same, which sucks because it needs some fixes. (ROUND circles? What's that?)

    Puckdropper


    Have you tried "smooth" on the circular geometry? And or adding more
    segments to the arks and circles?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Thu Jan 19 09:34:15 2023
    On 1/18/2023 3:50 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure
    what I was going to get. I think I get it now, and it's awesome for
    adding profiles around things. One of the places it excels is in
    figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time
    manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line
    by line and selecting all at once. Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on.
    It should be a single face and make contact with the line. It should
    be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select
    the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until
    your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude
    on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you
    want to extrude. It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude
    along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool
    had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky
    YouTube video that Sketchup puts out. Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the
    basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it. It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.

    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing. Use
    the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show. Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete
    assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0. No geometry should ever be on a layer. Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    Well, not always. Once a component or group is placed on an
    alternative layer it sometimes has to be modified. You would not want
    to move it to the default layer to make modifications and then back again.




    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing. Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag. I can look at any number of cabinets or just
    one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time
    if both are visible. Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under
    the hierarchy of a specific tag. For example I have 5 cabinets each
    on their specific Layer/Tag. Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put
    each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag
    Folder selected allows you to turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively online... It's just not a world I can trust.



    I understand however I use the pro version. That is a subscription for updates. If you choose to not pay for the subscription the free
    updates stop, but you can still use the program.

    FWIW the Pro version and your data files are still on your computer.
    Because I sell most of my work the cost is offset.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Thu Jan 19 10:42:06 2023
    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com:

    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively
    online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't
    all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever." https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But at
    least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with the
    $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Bill on Thu Jan 19 10:44:14 2023
    On 1/18/2023 10:28 PM, Bill wrote:
    On 1/18/2023 8:50 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 18:58:52 -0500, Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote:

    On 1/18/2023 4:50 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:VRCdnQkJ3OsuV1v-nZ2dnZfqn_ednZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/17/2023 12:06 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Follow Me seemed to be a bit of a weird tool, I never was quite sure >>>>>> what I was going to get.  I think I get it now, and it's awesome for >>>>>> adding profiles around things.  One of the places it excels is in >>>>>> figuring out how to do corners, so you're not spending lots of time >>>>>> manually mitering a corner.

    So there's two ways to make friends with "Follow me", selecting line >>>>>> by line and selecting all at once.  Selecting all at once is my
    preferred method, it almost always seems to work.

    First, draw your profile on one of the lines you'll be extruding on. >>>>>> It should be a single face and make contact with the line.  It should >>>>>> be perpendicular to the line.

    For the "line by line" method, select the follow me tool and select >>>>>> the face to extrude, then move it to select the line you want to
    extrude on. Carefully navigate to the next line and keep going until >>>>>> your extrusion is done.

    For the "all at once" method, select the lines you want to extrude >>>>>> on, then select the follow me tool, and finally click the face you >>>>>> want to extrude.  It will then extrude along that path.

    Note: Your face and the lines you select must be on the same
    component. If you draw a face outside a component and try to extrude >>>>>> along the lines of a component it will not work.

    Later we'll talk about layers... Can you believe such a powerful tool >>>>>> had documentation that said "don't use layers and be happy?"

    Puckdropper

    I use follow me so seldom that I have to refresh myself with a quicky >>>>> YouTube video that Sketchup puts out.  Between 1 and 3 minutes in, the >>>>> basics are covered.

    That's why it took me so long to make friends with it.  It's not
    something you need often but can be really handy when you do.
    FWIW "Layers" have been renamed "Tags" on the past 1 or 2 updates,
    maybe more.

    It is a good habit to not use "Layers/Tags" for design drawing.   Use >>>>> the Layers/Tags for segregating work that you do not want to always
    show.   Basically, draw/design on the default layer and when complete >>>>> assign it to another Layer/Tag, if you want.

    All geometry goes on Layer 0.  No geometry should ever be on a layer. >>>> Components and groups go on layers, geometry goes on layer 0.

    I like the option to add a "Tag Folder".
    I am designing kitchen cabinets and want all cabinets to be in the
    same drawing.   Each individual cabinet, when complete, is on a
    different Layer/Tag.   I can look at any number of cabinets or just >>>>> one particular cabinet by turning their respective Layer/Tags on or
    off.

    BE CAREFUL to not draw on two different Layers/Tags at the same time >>>>> if both are visible.   Your editing will be added to only the
    currently selected Layer/Tag.

    And additional Tag Folder lets you place specific extra layers under >>>>> the hierarchy of a specific tag.   For example I have 5 cabinets each >>>>> on their  specific Layer/Tag.   Adding a Tag Folder allows you to put >>>>> each cabinet layer in those individual folders along with separate
    Layer/Tags for dimensions unique to the cabinet in that tag folder.

    This allows me to have the ability to turn every thing in that Tag
    "Folder" on or off with a single click.

    Additionally Adding a scene for each cabinet with the appropriate Tag >>>>> Folder selected allows you to  turn off every thing that is not
    assigned to that Layer/Tag and zooms you to that particular cabinet
    for viewing or editing.


    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively
    online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    Puckdropper


    Puckdropper, I may have a copy of the free install program from when
    SketchUp was owned by Google, before it was sold to Trimble. I believe
    it is from around 2008. I last installed it on Windows 7, but SU still
    runs on Windows 10 after my upgrade. Let me know if you are interested.

    The 2017 version still works.  I've been using it since, well, 2017.

    If its the Trimble version it works with more handicaps than the free
    Google version. The last time I tried the free version it didn't support "labels", for instance, which were essential to what I wanted to do.




    Lables?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Puckdropper@21:1/5 to Leon on Thu Jan 19 20:08:09 2023
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward
    those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I
    am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But
    at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with
    the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the
    more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new
    program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all rental software.

    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Thu Jan 19 19:36:11 2023
    On 1/19/2023 6:15 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    The solid modeler (drawing) is pretty much the same, which
    sucks because it needs some fixes. (ROUND circles? What's that?)


    To be fair, due to "raster graphics", in many computer applications,
    circles are merely polygons (an ordered list of vertices). And the more vertices you want, the most space it takes and the longer it takes to
    render the geometry. I believe that SU allows you to override the
    default number of edges or vertices for a particular circle. In "old"
    (or new?) "vector graphics" monitors, circles might possibly render
    better--I honestly don't know the answer, but my mind is open to this possibility. When I was in school, the vector graphics monitor was "that
    old dusty thing in the corner".

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 19 22:04:52 2023
    On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 11:26:38 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com:

    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions. >>>Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >>>online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't
    all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever." >https://www.alibre.com/

    The price for the personal/workshop version is at the right price
    point. SVG and DXF support makes it a potential SketchUp killer for
    me.

    It does have a $50/yr maintenance cost.

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys >with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Me too. Thanks for linking it. I'll have to download the trial soon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Puckdropper@21:1/5 to Bill on Fri Jan 20 09:37:18 2023
    Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote in news:0mlyL.324999$MVg8.43782@fx12.iad:

    On 1/19/2023 6:15 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    The solid modeler (drawing) is pretty much the same, which
    sucks because it needs some fixes. (ROUND circles? What's that?)


    To be fair, due to "raster graphics", in many computer applications,
    circles are merely polygons (an ordered list of vertices). And the
    more vertices you want, the most space it takes and the longer it
    takes to render the geometry. I believe that SU allows you to override
    the default number of edges or vertices for a particular circle. In
    "old" (or new?) "vector graphics" monitors, circles might possibly
    render better--I honestly don't know the answer, but my mind is open
    to this possibility. When I was in school, the vector graphics monitor
    was "that old dusty thing in the corner".

    When you draw a circle about 4 inches in diameter then send it to a 3D
    printer it prints out with noticable flats along the outside. With any
    other program, it will be round.

    I've tried increasing the number of sides, but usually hit the limits
    before I get something really round. My current solution is just not to
    print anything that requires a really large circle.

    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Fri Jan 20 10:50:36 2023
    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward
    those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I
    am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But
    at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with
    the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the
    more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new
    program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro
    version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements
    and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it.

    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for
    itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions
    do not allow that.

    BUT if this other program will write directly to SVG that saves a step.
    And if it draws better that may be better for you. Also, I have drawn
    caster wheels on Sketchp, converted to SVG on Sketchup and Cut those
    casters out of Baltic birch with my Shaper Origin. They were round.







    Puckdropper

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Fri Jan 20 10:30:45 2023
    On 1/19/2023 9:04 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 11:26:38 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com:

    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively
    online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't
    all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    The price for the personal/workshop version is at the right price
    point. SVG and DXF support makes it a potential SketchUp killer for
    me.

    SVG and DXF Support. That will likely require a plug in which may be
    free and may require extra cash. DXF is supported tith Sketchup Pro and
    the SVG plug in, the one I use, is free. Food for thought. And yes it
    could be a Sketchup killer but Sketchup is to well suited for woodworking.


    It does have a $50/yr maintenance cost.

    In that case, maybe not much better than the Pro version of Sketchup.
    Sketch up requires annual maintenance for updates and quite a bit more
    but Sketchup Pro updates are not necessary to continue using the program.



    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys >> with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Yes! Let us know. While the licensing terms are more reasonable than Sketchup, Sketchup is a load more reasonable than AutoCAD, a program I
    used for years.


    If I consider how many years I used Sketchup for free, the new Pro
    pricing is easier to swallow.




    Me too. Thanks for linking it. I'll have to download the trial soon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 20 15:34:23 2023
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:50:36 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward
    those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I
    am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But
    at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with
    the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the
    more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new
    program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all
    rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before >purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro >version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome >version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements
    and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it.

    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for
    itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions
    do not allow that.

    The web version is so slow that it's useless. I tried it and went
    back to '17.

    BUT if this other program will write directly to SVG that saves a step.
    And if it draws better that may be better for you. Also, I have drawn >caster wheels on Sketchp, converted to SVG on Sketchup and Cut those
    casters out of Baltic birch with my Shaper Origin. They were round.

    I thought SU pro would write SVGs.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Fri Jan 20 17:43:40 2023
    On 1/20/2023 2:34 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:50:36 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward
    those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I
    am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But
    at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with
    the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the
    more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new
    program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all >>> rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before
    purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro
    version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome
    version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements
    and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it.

    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for
    itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions
    do not allow that.

    The web version is so slow that it's useless. I tried it and went
    back to '17.

    That is another reason that I don't use the web version. Were you by
    any chance using the free web version or the paid web version?


    BUT if this other program will write directly to SVG that saves a step.
    And if it draws better that may be better for you. Also, I have drawn
    caster wheels on Sketchp, converted to SVG on Sketchup and Cut those
    casters out of Baltic birch with my Shaper Origin. They were round.

    I thought SU pro would write SVGs.

    With the free plugin. When you high lite a surface and right click you
    select FaceSVG from the pop up window. it copies a black version of
    the surface to the origin of the drawing. Right clicking the black
    copy allows you to Write SVG Profile.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill@21:1/5 to Puckdropper on Fri Jan 20 21:42:11 2023
    On 1/20/2023 4:37 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Bill <nonegiven@att.net> wrote in news:0mlyL.324999$MVg8.43782@fx12.iad:

    On 1/19/2023 6:15 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
    The solid modeler (drawing) is pretty much the same, which
    sucks because it needs some fixes. (ROUND circles? What's that?)


    To be fair, due to "raster graphics", in many computer applications,
    circles are merely polygons (an ordered list of vertices). And the
    more vertices you want, the most space it takes and the longer it
    takes to render the geometry. I believe that SU allows you to override
    the default number of edges or vertices for a particular circle. In
    "old" (or new?) "vector graphics" monitors, circles might possibly
    render better--I honestly don't know the answer, but my mind is open
    to this possibility. When I was in school, the vector graphics monitor
    was "that old dusty thing in the corner".

    When you draw a circle about 4 inches in diameter then send it to a 3D printer it prints out with noticable flats along the outside. With any
    other program, it will be round.

    I've tried increasing the number of sides, but usually hit the limits
    before I get something really round. My current solution is just not to print anything that requires a really large circle.

    Puckdropper




    A circle centered at (h, k) is given by (h+r*cos(t), k+r*sin(t)), (t in
    0< t<= 2*PI). Armed with that, and a "for-loop", you can choose how
    many "flats" it will have, up to the limits of resolution of your
    software or your 3D-printer.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 21 23:49:05 2023
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:30:45 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 9:04 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 11:26:38 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com: >>>
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions.
    Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >>>>> online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't
    all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    The price for the personal/workshop version is at the right price
    point. SVG and DXF support makes it a potential SketchUp killer for
    me.

    SVG and DXF Support. That will likely require a plug in which may be
    free and may require extra cash. DXF is supported tith Sketchup Pro and
    the SVG plug in, the one I use, is free. Food for thought. And yes it >could be a Sketchup killer but Sketchup is to well suited for woodworking.

    Good point. I was thinking about Shaper use. Looking into it some
    more, it would probably be better for a 3D printer than woodworking. I
    have enough to learn without getting into 3D.

    It does have a $50/yr maintenance cost.

    In that case, maybe not much better than the Pro version of Sketchup.
    Sketch up requires annual maintenance for updates and quite a bit more
    but Sketchup Pro updates are not necessary to continue using the program.



    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys >>> with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Yes! Let us know. While the licensing terms are more reasonable than >Sketchup, Sketchup is a load more reasonable than AutoCAD, a program I
    used for years.

    Isn't AutoCAD 2D only?

    If I consider how many years I used Sketchup for free, the new Pro
    pricing is easier to swallow.

    I find paying for it harder to swallow. ;-)


    Me too. Thanks for linking it. I'll have to download the trial soon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 21 23:43:35 2023
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 17:43:40 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/20/2023 2:34 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:50:36 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward
    those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I >>>>> am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But >>>>> at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with >>>>> the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the
    more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new
    program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all >>>> rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before
    purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro
    version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome
    version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements
    and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it. >>>
    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for
    itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions
    do not allow that.

    The web version is so slow that it's useless. I tried it and went
    back to '17.

    That is another reason that I don't use the web version. Were you by
    any chance using the free web version or the paid web version?

    Free. Pro is a little rich for me. If I were doing this
    commercially, it would be a slam dunk.


    BUT if this other program will write directly to SVG that saves a step.
    And if it draws better that may be better for you. Also, I have drawn
    caster wheels on Sketchp, converted to SVG on Sketchup and Cut those
    casters out of Baltic birch with my Shaper Origin. They were round.

    I thought SU pro would write SVGs.

    With the free plugin. When you high lite a surface and right click you >select FaceSVG from the pop up window. it copies a black version of
    the surface to the origin of the drawing. Right clicking the black
    copy allows you to Write SVG Profile.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Sun Jan 22 11:30:47 2023
    On 1/21/2023 10:49 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:30:45 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 9:04 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 11:26:38 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com: >>>>
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com> >>>>> wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions. >>>>>> Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >>>>>> online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just
    "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't >>>>> all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    The price for the personal/workshop version is at the right price
    point. SVG and DXF support makes it a potential SketchUp killer for
    me.

    SVG and DXF Support. That will likely require a plug in which may be
    free and may require extra cash. DXF is supported tith Sketchup Pro and
    the SVG plug in, the one I use, is free. Food for thought. And yes it
    could be a Sketchup killer but Sketchup is to well suited for woodworking.

    Good point. I was thinking about Shaper use. Looking into it some
    more, it would probably be better for a 3D printer than woodworking. I
    have enough to learn without getting into 3D.

    It does have a $50/yr maintenance cost.

    In that case, maybe not much better than the Pro version of Sketchup.
    Sketch up requires annual maintenance for updates and quite a bit more
    but Sketchup Pro updates are not necessary to continue using the program.



    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys
    with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Yes! Let us know. While the licensing terms are more reasonable than
    Sketchup, Sketchup is a load more reasonable than AutoCAD, a program I
    used for years.

    Isn't AutoCAD 2D only?

    AutoCAD is 3D, AutoCAD LT is 2D, I used the LT version and it was/is
    expensive, $460 per year.




    If I consider how many years I used Sketchup for free, the new Pro
    pricing is easier to swallow.

    I find paying for it harder to swallow. ;-)

    So did I but it is the best program for, woodworking, that I have ever
    used. So not a big deal. And I found that most software is going to
    the subscription route. So even if they say you own it, that may be a
    limited time. One the pisses me off is Quicken. They say you own and
    keep your files on your computer and load the program on your computer.
    BUT if you do not continue to subscribe you will not be able to use the
    program or look at your files.





    Me too. Thanks for linking it. I'll have to download the trial soon.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Sun Jan 22 11:55:29 2023
    On 1/21/2023 10:43 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 17:43:40 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/20/2023 2:34 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:50:36 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever." >>>>>>> https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward >>>>>>> those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I >>>>>> am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But >>>>>> at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with >>>>>> the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the >>>>> more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new >>>>> program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all >>>>> rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before >>>> purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro >>>> version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome >>>> version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements
    and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it. >>>>
    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for
    itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions >>>> do not allow that.

    The web version is so slow that it's useless. I tried it and went
    back to '17.

    That is another reason that I don't use the web version. Were you by
    any chance using the free web version or the paid web version?

    Free. Pro is a little rich for me. If I were doing this
    commercially, it would be a slam dunk.

    I would suspect the free version may not be given the band width to
    really work quickly.
    Yes the paid Pro version is pricey but how much do you spend on tools.
    ;~) LOL.

    For the time being I would still use Pro if I was not selling my work.
    I'm in the middle of re-doing our kitchen and would not want to be
    learning new software.

    IIRC you can load a trial version.





    BUT if this other program will write directly to SVG that saves a step. >>>> And if it draws better that may be better for you. Also, I have drawn >>>> caster wheels on Sketchp, converted to SVG on Sketchup and Cut those
    casters out of Baltic birch with my Shaper Origin. They were round. >>>>
    I thought SU pro would write SVGs.

    With the free plugin. When you high lite a surface and right click you
    select FaceSVG from the pop up window. it copies a black version of
    the surface to the origin of the drawing. Right clicking the black
    copy allows you to Write SVG Profile.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 22 16:42:31 2023
    On Sun, 22 Jan 2023 11:55:29 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/21/2023 10:43 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 17:43:40 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/20/2023 2:34 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:50:36 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever." >>>>>>>> https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward >>>>>>>> those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms. >>>>>>>>
    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I >>>>>>> am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But >>>>>>> at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with >>>>>>> the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the >>>>>> more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new >>>>>> program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all
    rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before >>>>> purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro >>>>> version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome >>>>> version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements >>>>> and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it. >>>>>
    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for >>>>> itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions >>>>> do not allow that.

    The web version is so slow that it's useless. I tried it and went
    back to '17.

    That is another reason that I don't use the web version. Were you by
    any chance using the free web version or the paid web version?

    Free. Pro is a little rich for me. If I were doing this
    commercially, it would be a slam dunk.

    I would suspect the free version may not be given the band width to
    really work quickly.
    Yes the paid Pro version is pricey but how much do you spend on tools.
    ;~) LOL.

    I don't rent tools. ;-)

    For the time being I would still use Pro if I was not selling my work.
    I'm in the middle of re-doing our kitchen and would not want to be
    learning new software.

    I probably would if I had a large job like that. The next year?

    IIRC you can load a trial version.

    For a month. Just enough to get something done then throw it way or
    pay. Kinda like a streaming service. Get it for a month free, then
    get hooked on a series.

    BTW, I did buy/rent Studio for the $100, so there is that. Outside
    the large library of shapes and projects, it's pretty cheesy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 22 16:44:33 2023
    On Sun, 22 Jan 2023 11:30:47 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/21/2023 10:49 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:30:45 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 9:04 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 11:26:38 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com>
    wrote:

    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com: >>>>>
    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com> >>>>>> wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions. >>>>>>> Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >>>>>>> online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just >>>>>> "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't >>>>>> all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    The price for the personal/workshop version is at the right price
    point. SVG and DXF support makes it a potential SketchUp killer for
    me.

    SVG and DXF Support. That will likely require a plug in which may be
    free and may require extra cash. DXF is supported tith Sketchup Pro and >>> the SVG plug in, the one I use, is free. Food for thought. And yes it >>> could be a Sketchup killer but Sketchup is to well suited for woodworking. >>
    Good point. I was thinking about Shaper use. Looking into it some
    more, it would probably be better for a 3D printer than woodworking. I
    have enough to learn without getting into 3D.

    It does have a $50/yr maintenance cost.

    In that case, maybe not much better than the Pro version of Sketchup.
    Sketch up requires annual maintenance for updates and quite a bit more
    but Sketchup Pro updates are not necessary to continue using the program. >>>


    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys
    with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Yes! Let us know. While the licensing terms are more reasonable than >>> Sketchup, Sketchup is a load more reasonable than AutoCAD, a program I
    used for years.

    Isn't AutoCAD 2D only?

    AutoCAD is 3D, AutoCAD LT is 2D, I used the LT version and it was/is >expensive, $460 per year.




    If I consider how many years I used Sketchup for free, the new Pro
    pricing is easier to swallow.

    I find paying for it harder to swallow. ;-)

    So did I but it is the best program for, woodworking, that I have ever
    used. So not a big deal. And I found that most software is going to
    the subscription route. So even if they say you own it, that may be a >limited time. One the pisses me off is Quicken. They say you own and
    keep your files on your computer and load the program on your computer.
    BUT if you do not continue to subscribe you will not be able to use the >program or look at your files.

    That might as well be ransomware.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Mon Jan 23 09:15:55 2023
    On 1/22/2023 3:44 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Jan 2023 11:30:47 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/21/2023 10:49 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:30:45 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 9:04 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 11:26:38 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com> >>>>> wrote:

    krw@notreal.com wrote in news:q18hsh5r4lf6b69mn8iqro37h3qrq722e2@4ax.com:

    On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 09:50:39 GMT, Puckdropper <puckdropper@yahoo.com> >>>>>>> wrote:

    I'm stuck on Sketchup Make 2017 because of poor business decisions. >>>>>>>> Software as a service, renting software, programs running exclusively >>>>>>>> online... It's just not a world I can trust.

    I'm the same, though it's getting harder and harder to do. I just >>>>>>> "rented" Shaper Studio. I'm not all that happy about it but it wasn't >>>>>>> all that expensive.


    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever."
    https://www.alibre.com/

    The price for the personal/workshop version is at the right price
    point. SVG and DXF support makes it a potential SketchUp killer for >>>>> me.

    SVG and DXF Support. That will likely require a plug in which may be >>>> free and may require extra cash. DXF is supported tith Sketchup Pro and >>>> the SVG plug in, the one I use, is free. Food for thought. And yes it >>>> could be a Sketchup killer but Sketchup is to well suited for woodworking. >>>
    Good point. I was thinking about Shaper use. Looking into it some
    more, it would probably be better for a 3D printer than woodworking. I
    have enough to learn without getting into 3D.

    It does have a $50/yr maintenance cost.

    In that case, maybe not much better than the Pro version of Sketchup.
    Sketch up requires annual maintenance for updates and quite a bit more >>>> but Sketchup Pro updates are not necessary to continue using the program. >>>>


    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward those guys
    with some business for having sane licensing terms.

    Yes! Let us know. While the licensing terms are more reasonable than >>>> Sketchup, Sketchup is a load more reasonable than AutoCAD, a program I >>>> used for years.

    Isn't AutoCAD 2D only?

    AutoCAD is 3D, AutoCAD LT is 2D, I used the LT version and it was/is
    expensive, $460 per year.




    If I consider how many years I used Sketchup for free, the new Pro
    pricing is easier to swallow.

    I find paying for it harder to swallow. ;-)

    So did I but it is the best program for, woodworking, that I have ever
    used. So not a big deal. And I found that most software is going to
    the subscription route. So even if they say you own it, that may be a
    limited time. One the pisses me off is Quicken. They say you own and
    keep your files on your computer and load the program on your computer.
    BUT if you do not continue to subscribe you will not be able to use the
    program or look at your files.

    That might as well be ransomware.


    Repressively.

    Let me warn you with Sketchup though. If you subscribe to pro the file
    format changes with each major version change. The current version
    can open all previous versions but older versions cannot open newer
    versions. I suspect that mopst software is like that.

    BUT with the latest version of PRO you can save files in the older
    version formats. I suppose this is for sharing files with older versions.

    If you think you will not always use Pro or if they pull the Quicken
    trick save in the older version format also so that you can open the
    newer files in the older versions.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Mon Jan 23 09:32:34 2023
    On 1/22/2023 3:42 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Jan 2023 11:55:29 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/21/2023 10:43 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 17:43:40 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/20/2023 2:34 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 20 Jan 2023 10:50:36 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 1/19/2023 2:08 PM, Puckdropper wrote:
    Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in
    news:ABydnVjg9upD71T-nZ2dnZfqn_idnZ2d@giganews.com:

    On 1/19/2023 5:26 AM, Puckdropper wrote:

    On the front page, these guys say "Buy it once, own it forever." >>>>>>>>> https://www.alibre.com/

    I really need to see if it will do what I do, I'd like to reward >>>>>>>>> those guys with some business for having sane licensing terms. >>>>>>>>>
    Puckdropper


    Just looking at it, I would rather pay the price of something that I >>>>>>>> am proficient with than to have to learn a 7th drawing program. But >>>>>>>> at least there is a 30 day trial. I wonder what you don't get with >>>>>>>> the $150 version vs the $600~$1400 versions.

    My little hobby business is 3D printing scale models. That means the >>>>>>> more time I spend in Sketchup the longer a new model takes. If a new >>>>>>> program can get me to the end faster then I'm all for it.

    Trimble got rid of the option to buy Sketchup Pro outright. It's now all
    rental software.

    Maybe. Have you spoken to the sales staff? I talked to them before >>>>>> purchasing with the new pricing 2 years ago and they said that the Pro >>>>>> version is still the desktop version and iPad version and web or chrome >>>>>> version. You do have to upgrade yearly if you want the improvements >>>>>> and upgrades but not doing so prevents updates and improvements.
    As explained to me you do not have to resubscribe to continue to use it. >>>>>>
    That said I can easily fit $300 per year into my budget. It pays for >>>>>> itself many times over with the first job each year.

    One thing that is important to me with Sketchup Pro is that I can
    customize the lay out, icons, short cuts, etc. IIRC the web versions >>>>>> do not allow that.

    The web version is so slow that it's useless. I tried it and went
    back to '17.

    That is another reason that I don't use the web version. Were you by >>>> any chance using the free web version or the paid web version?

    Free. Pro is a little rich for me. If I were doing this
    commercially, it would be a slam dunk.

    I would suspect the free version may not be given the band width to
    really work quickly.
    Yes the paid Pro version is pricey but how much do you spend on tools.
    ;~) LOL.

    I don't rent tools. ;-)

    Yeah but if you did you would have more room. LOL. You rent most
    every thing else, food, drinks, electricity, gas, you know. ;~)




    For the time being I would still use Pro if I was not selling my work.
    I'm in the middle of re-doing our kitchen and would not want to be
    learning new software.

    I probably would if I had a large job like that. The next year?

    Then maybe I would not renew the subscription and keep using the same
    version. Right now you do not have to renew the subscription to
    continue using the latest version that you paid for, as explained to me
    2 years ago. BUT if you decide to up grade later you pay for the years
    you did not.






    IIRC you can load a trial version.

    For a month. Just enough to get something done then throw it way or
    pay. Kinda like a streaming service. Get it for a month free, then
    get hooked on a series.

    Yeah! Soooo with a Roku streaming device you typically get free trials
    to subscriptions.... We have purchased 3~4 new Roku devices and get
    that feature every time with each... Sometimes the low end Roku device
    is less expensive. ;~)


    BTW, I did buy/rent Studio for the $100, so there is that. Outside
    the large library of shapes and projects, it's pretty cheesy.

    Yes pricey but works well and seamlessly with the Origin. I watched a
    video about Studio and they are apparently improving/evolving the
    program like they are doing with the Origin. I do like being able to preprogram the cuts and depths. Check that out, its the latest Shaper Sessions video covering Studio, came out last Thursday, available on
    YouTube.

    And sooner than later I'll be upgrading an Origin plug-in for the
    automatic depth change to take advantage of not having to stop and
    manually change the depth of cut. That is a one time purchase and
    price too. $200. There are a few Shaper Sessons covering that new
    feature too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)