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mgnt8 said:I've got a 4 core 3.6 ghz Xeon,16 gb RAM, NVIDIA Quadro 4000 and M010 crashes on me constantly. In fact it just crashed again 5 minutes ago. Switching windows between parts & assembly seems to be the biggest problem.
hnguye14 said:I have use both Solidworks and ProE CAD
tools in my profeesional career. I am leaning toward SW
due to the cost and it easier to use.
dross said:Sounds like a graphics driver problem.
josephlordy said:And the config.pro. What a shambles. In
solidworks I get 'Tools' 'Options' and lots of tick boxes to
set options I want, nice.
dgs said:josephlordy said:And the config.pro. What
a shambles. In
solidworks I get 'Tools' 'Options' and lots of tick boxes
to
set options I want, nice.
This si a debate that will never die. I use both but
prefer
Pro/E. While I may be able model faster in SW, I can
make
far more robust models in pro that I can manipulate to my
will. I can make change after change and the model will
update, SW is not nearly as flexible.
As far as the config.pro, yes, it's a bit old school, but
again the flexibility is unmatched. I can distribute
company
standards via config.sup and load multiple config files
to
match client standards and personal preferences. Most
importantly, I can manage all of this on the fly and
remotely, distributing new settings to my entire user
base.
You can set up a custom install for SW, but once SW is
installed, you have no control and no means of
maintaining
consistency throughout the company. You cannot even
point
users to the company templates reliably.
The are each good programs, with their strengths, but for
my
work Pro/E is hands down superior.
This is the sort of thinking that I find just utterly BIZARRE, and remarkably self-centered.MarkEngr said:I'll say amen to that from now to eternity. ProE/Creo is a hideous program that does not attempt to implement user's suggestions much to the contrary of DS/Solidworks. Solidworks has grown exponentially due to their Open-mindedness; the company listens to its users