Simon.Whitbread
2006-10-03, 08:51 PM
Can't wait to get my hands on them! But what I find really annoying (and this keeps coming up), is the lack of documentation on build releases. I know factory is busy, everyone is, but someone must know whats been fixed, changed etc. I still haven't rolled out 9.1 because I don't know if the following 'known issue' has been fixed.
Manage Links in a Workshared Project
Currently, in a workshared project, any actions (Import, Reload From, etc) in the Manage Links dialog will be reverted and lost when anyone else Saves to Central. To accomplish these Manage Links actions: 1) have everyone Save to Central, Relinquish, and exit; 2) have one person make the Manage Link changes; 3) have everyone make new local files.
While I can see the benefits of this in terms of controlling which files are updated and when. It becomes a huge management issue when working on a joint venture with multiple buildings (20+) where the common file format is DWG. Each building has a minimum 5 DWGs imported / linked.
Currently, the only answer is download, install and try. I can think of better ways of spending my time... training, support, research. All for the sake of a small text document.
We are told there are now over 100,000 copies of Revit worldwide, if only 10% of these are fully working, that still represents a huge time investment by managers and companies everywhere.
Autodesk - if you are listening, please ensure your customers are provided with this information.
Thanks
Simon
Manage Links in a Workshared Project
Currently, in a workshared project, any actions (Import, Reload From, etc) in the Manage Links dialog will be reverted and lost when anyone else Saves to Central. To accomplish these Manage Links actions: 1) have everyone Save to Central, Relinquish, and exit; 2) have one person make the Manage Link changes; 3) have everyone make new local files.
While I can see the benefits of this in terms of controlling which files are updated and when. It becomes a huge management issue when working on a joint venture with multiple buildings (20+) where the common file format is DWG. Each building has a minimum 5 DWGs imported / linked.
Currently, the only answer is download, install and try. I can think of better ways of spending my time... training, support, research. All for the sake of a small text document.
We are told there are now over 100,000 copies of Revit worldwide, if only 10% of these are fully working, that still represents a huge time investment by managers and companies everywhere.
Autodesk - if you are listening, please ensure your customers are provided with this information.
Thanks
Simon