SketchUp 2019 release
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I still miss the way I can build in Sketchup and have yet to really dive into modeling in Blender. There are some Skethup-like "tools" and plugins for Blender but I've yet to really get into those. It still might be that I have to use Sketchup for modeling quickly and then importing into Blender. Not a bad trade off given Blender is free. I've realized a lot of my work is still really embedded in the "walled-garden" of Sketchup for now.
Nothing against Sketchup, but I need a little more power. Lighting, rendering and rigging. And now that I see Blender can really do some great edge outline looks, I can really stay in that platform for most of my work.
If anyone wants to tackle Blender mods for instance, push and pull, and sketch modeling for 2.8, I'd love-love to see that.
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yawn
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I think that to have any success in convincing the Blender team to add SketchUp like features it needs to be done both in mass and in detail.
It's easier to understand how to implement something if it is described in detail and broken down into digestable chunks. -
Two months in and they fixed a few bugs.... See folks, the subscription model really works for you!
https://help.sketchup.com/en/release-notes-0(I miss reading the daily rants on this thread...so felt I had to resurrect it) (also wanted to hear how all the new blender users were faring)
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Sorry if it's slightly off topic. Does anyone know who designed the SketchUp 2019 cover building?
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better ask this in the offic. forum.
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I think I read it was Peter Guthrie and his company The Boundary.
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Thanks. It's The Boundary indeed. Sadly you can't find it on their website.
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2019 DWG Import is disasterous- constantly skips geometry in multiple files. Blocks exploding is not a good option. The best workaround so far is to import into 2018 and re-open in 2019.
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@rempage said:
Thanks. It's The Boundary indeed. Sadly you can't find it on their website.
Interesting thing is that on CG Architect, in their latest article, when the Boundary lists all he software tools they use, SketchUp is not on the list.
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@valerostudio said:
Interesting thing is that on CG Architect, in their latest article, when the Boundary lists all he software tools they use, SketchUp is not on the list.
Secret weapon much?
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I'm still using Pro v8 - I gave up once the "trust us - it'll be great" licensing came in.
The loss of Geolocation was a blow, but I am now able to work through using public/ Gov terrain information and imagery using QGIS, Spirix shapefile importer, the wonderful Toposhape and Superdrape (thanks TIG!).
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@pixero said:
I think I read it was Peter Guthrie and his company The Boundary.
I got curious, googled and found this. Interesting videos of their work too.
https://blog.sketchup.com/article/pushing-boundary-architectural-visualization
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@masterpaul said:
Edit:
There's a destructive push pull in development:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=beZau_wpR-U
https://blenderartists.org/t/destructive-extrude-beta/678275That's not available in Blender 2.8 because of the new boolean engine they are using. It may make a comeback in 2.81 as they are working on an even better boolean engine which should be ready by then.
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@pbacot said:
I think that it is metric units only.
English units are supported.
Here's one of the videos from my Definitely EEVEE series on rendering SketchUp scenes in Blender 2.8. -
@monsterzero said:
If anyone wants to tackle Blender mods for instance, push and pull, and sketch modeling for 2.8, I'd love-love to see that.
Here's a couple of videos which talk some about using modifiers to create models. Once you use modifiers, it's hard to think of modeling any other way
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@mozzie said:
I'm still using Pro v8 - I gave up once the "trust us - it'll be great" licensing came in.
The loss of Geolocation was a blow, but I am now able to work through using public/ Gov terrain information and imagery using QGIS, Spirix shapefile importer, the wonderful Toposhape and Superdrape (thanks TIG!).
You also could check out:
http://terrain.party/ -
Didn't receive that email, no.
But did just receive my notice for renewing my annual Maintenance & Support license. I hesitated, since I never use Trimble Support and there has been little of value in recent upgrades (while long-identified bugs, missing features and UI annoyances remain unaddressed). In the end I decided to give them the benefit of the doubt for one more year and I renewed.
Apple's latest MacBook release yesterday shows that they've finally started listening to their pro users again (and designing product features to meet their workflow needs), so it's not impossible that Trimble will turn the same corner sometime soon β one can hope
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Anyone else received An email with An offer to 'upgrade' your classic license to the new PRO subscribtion for a one time 60% discount?
Not remotely tempted... Using blender nowadays for some parts of the work.
Edit: after using Blender for a few weeks now and then - I must say; I'm really impressed with it. Tried it a few years ago - it just didn't work for me then. Now, the new version has a much more friendly UI and it makes all the difference to keep going.
With Blender, I feel like the software isn't holding me back anymore - like SketchUp does in several areas (high poly, materials/ uv-mapping, modifiers, optimizing, speed, etc). After all those years of really mediocre updates and the 2019-subscribtion-move its nice to use software again that surprises me in a good way - just like Unreal & Oculus every new (sub-)version do.
Still using SketchUp for architecture projects and LayOut for making working drawings. But when I need something high poly, mapped and/or optimized for VR, its Blender.
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interesting that there was no "Sketchup 2020 release" thread this November..
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