![]() Emailing AutoCAD files and asking clients to install a viewer to see the design process are now things of the past. Now, through Autodesk Inventor and A360, users are able to share and collaborate 3D designs between anyone, anywhere, and nearly on any device. Loren Welch began by discussing the updates and changes for how data sharing has changed prior to Autodesk’s Inventor 2016 R3 update and Inventor 2017 Connected. So let’s go over a few of the topics they discussed, as well as questions from viewers. KETIV’s Jonathan Kriek and Autodesk Product Manager Loren Welch provided a live demonstration of how Connected Design works and how easily it can be implemented, increasing collaboration between everyone involved in your project. It gives the user drawing by drawing control over what is saved to Autodesk’s servers.įind more official info on the change here.The recent Autodesk Virtual Academy webcast explored Inventor Connected Design on A360. If you want files to be saved to your A360 drive, you have to save them to it. So now you cannot auto sync your design files to the cloud. As a side note – that behavior was/is on by default, and while the drive is encrypted, many (read most) users like to turn that default behavior off.Īutodesk, however, got the memo and starting with the 2016 release of AutoCAD and its verticals removed that little check box in options. In options, if “Enable automatic sync” was check on the online tab every drawing you saved was also saved to your 360 drive. In version before 2016 AutoCAD could, and by default did, automatically save design files to the cloud. With the 2016 release there’s been a small change in how files are saved to the A360 drive, and I want to talk about that. For most users where they see A360 is in the saving of design files and the syncing of settings. In the not too distant past Autodesk introduced Autodesk 360.
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