I had a visitor yesterday
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When I was about 26 and first time I went to visit my girlfriends family about 500 kms from where I live, she had two 16-year-old, twin brothers who had lots of lego sets.
Now I started to play with those legos and was playing during about my entire stay there (days) and the "mother" asked my girlfriend if she "picked up a crazy guy again..."I still like playing with them and I don't really see any real difference between the two things (except you can save your SU model and don't need to re-use the blocks again )
Cheers!
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Oli,
Good on ya for replying.GForce,
In a previous post:
http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/viewtopic.php?f=125&t=5772
You said:@unknownuser said:
I recently made this human research centre in Google sketchup.
It is the maximum i can het out of the program so far, after using it for 1 year or something.But now:
@unknownuser said:
I'm not very impressed. In sketchup everyting look's good very easy
and:
@unknownuser said:
This is what i think a 12 year old boy should be able to do with skecthup at that age
Gai,
I too still 'play' with Lego, In fact my last purchase was only about a month ago ( A remote controlled Catapillar bulldozer if you must know). There is usually 1 of 2 reasons I'll get a kit:
One - It gives me something to distract me when I'm in one of my cluster headache .....err clusters.
Two - I've been bounced from project to project without anything being finished to the point that I need to build something, anything AND FINISH IT just to get a sense of achievement.Anyway, why the hell should I stop having fun just because I'm 'Too old to play with toys'
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Being at about the same age I thing we can agree that we should decide to deny anything that seems to try to deprive us from our favourite toys!
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Ah Gai, I see your married too
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I hope Oli Tobey realizes that SketchUp is about having fun. I'm pretty sure he does as his model suggests he did have fun modelling the space. Modelling a space not from drawings or dimensions is a cool exercise that many of us who've been using SketchUp for years should probably try.
Oli don't let what others say discourage you from having fun with SketchUp. Put a positive spin on what Gforce wrote. I think what Gforce was sort of saying is there's no reason why a kid like you can't be as good at SketchUp as anybody else in the world. In that he'd be right. If you stick with it and develop your skills, by challenging yourself, you really could be one of the best. It isn't about your age -- the same goes for anyone. At this point you certainly are doing things with SketchUp that not many kids your age can do. You can be proud of that but know that if you stick with it, you can be doing things with it that almost nobody else, regardless of age, can do. Old farts like me use SketchUp every day but there's no reason why a kid like you can't be better. Look at the Gallery here and be inspired. Try the tutorials & tips and learn new things. Ask questions when you have them. But most of all have fun! I've met the guys who invented SketchUp. I know there's nothing more in the whole world they'd like than to know you and kids like you are having fun with SketchUp.
Regards, Ross
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Thanx guys and paul you are just one big kid arn't u!
poster-tobeyo
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Oli, I think I have some advise for you.
- Make each floor on a different layer, this will greatly simplify modeling.
- Make sure that all the lines that you draw are Exactly on the axis that you want them on.
- Occasionally check to make sure that faces that should be coplanar are coplanar.
- Always remember computer modeling is mathematical, if you want clean efficient models they must be mathematically correct.
I made this model when I was 13 and I am now 14, so I'm almost as young as you. The roof on that house took me a looong time to fix a 0.1 degree mess up that I made while I was not paying attention.
I'd love to see some more models of yours, and possibly some clean ones once you become a more experienced modeler.
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