Yes, very much. I'd like to get my hands on the one who came up with that.
Dwight
Yeah, that's going to be about as popular as an "uplift in rent"...Once again demonstrating the company's disconnect with their customers...It's almost like they have Onion/Babylon Bee people working there undercover.
Solidworks officially became Ransonware.RichGergely wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 12:44 pm I'm wondering with this blackmail incentive just how many will be using the 'uplift' of the middle finger at Solidworks
Hmmmm. That is disturbing.mgibeault wrote: ↑Fri May 12, 2023 2:15 pm Another problem with this is in education.
I spoke yesterday to a couple of college teachers and of course they know nothing about all of this. They don't know what is 3DEXPERIENCE and why a new panel keeps asking the user to connect to this obscure thing.
They chose to teach SolidWorks to their industrial design students because most companies that employs them are on SolidWorks.
When they finish their scholarship this may have changed and they are not aware at all. Teachers have no contact to a VAR and probably never receive communications from SolidWorks?
...this is indeed a just and noble cause to get behind. I wish you well.
Sadly, this is an apt metaphor.
.RichGergely wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 12:44 pm
I'm wondering with this blackmail incentive just how many will be using the 'uplift' of the middle finger at Solidworks
I'd think it would benefit them financially because students who learn to use a particular software may some day be in a position to decide which one to buy. Many people will gravitate toward something they're familiar with.Damo wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 12:55 am . . . Although I definitely can see why it would be a benefit to have solidworks representatives dealing with educational institiutions in regards to engineering students getting a good head start to the software in it most modern form, there's very likely no $$$ motivation for it.
Students don't buy the software. Why would dassault concern themselves with the effectiveness of an educational facility.?
(After all, is it not the job of the school board to ensure a viable curriculum.)
We know they really only market to businessmen, marketing types and corporations.
Meh.. I am generally quite displeased with dassault and the latest direction of solidworks marketing and service on the whole.
None of this really surprises me anymore. But yes, aside form the odd conscientious var who is genuinely doing good work, I do see bugger all reason why they would involve themselves with schools.
(Naive question maybe, but, do drug companies over there in USA get involved in doctor/medical training..??
What about equipment manufacturers of things like MRI machines..?)
All that said...
...this is indeed a just and noble cause to get behind. I wish you well.
Trouble is most 'young people' are pretty tech savvy and by any stretch of the imagination the 3D experience platform is not slick .Glenn Schroeder wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 8:43 am I'd think it would benefit them financially because students who learn to use a particular software may some day be in a position to decide which one to buy. Many people will gravitate toward something they're familiar with.
I doubt it would have been formulated by any one individual, more likely a PR committee.
This is stunning ....Peter De Vlieger wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 6:58 am Saw a presentation by my VAR about it all yesterday.*facepalm*
The biggest surprise was that in future there will be 3 tiers in service contracts instead of 1.
........................
In the highest tier you pay for NDA of your data.
- no sugar honey ice tea ! Am I the only one that thinks that in other words, in the lower tiers your company sensitive data is not protected and Solidworks/Dassault can use it without even a 'by your leave' !. Are they <expletive deleted> serious ?!
I'm kind of curious how that will fly in the EU.
I'd say they have been following the old way. When I was in school (mid 90s), I had to pay for a student version of Autocad,...forget the cost.....I saw a reference online around 2000 that is was $279. I think they started giving them to students free because SolidWorks was dominating the 3d market and they needed to get a foothold with Inventor. SolidWorks student was always $99 from what I recall, which undercut Autodesk years ago. I guess they never felt they had to go the free route since they had a significant market share. Autodesk got lazy and SolidWorks ate their lunch........now we'll see if the same happens to swx.
If it happens again you might reach out to GoEngineer. We switched to them from MLC Cad a few years ago when we discovered there's a license type intended for research that's the same as the commercial software, but considerably less expensive. I can't remember the name of it.doobes wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 4:48 pm Frankly, SolidWorks AKA Dassault Systemes' has never understood the academic model. AutoDesk gave every university who asked as many seats of Inventor as they wanted, with plenty to share with students. My son has an edu license.
Years ago a friend who was the Dean of the school of Engineering asked me to help him get acesss to SolidWorks for the school. They were using some no name 3D CAD system who author had gone out of business.
I contacted the folks I knew at SolidWorks, and they slope shouldered the whole thing onto the local VAR, MLC CAD.
MLC CAD quoted them $250/seat/year. When told about the Autodesk offer, they shrugged their shoulders.
Guess what they adopted....
Most people don't realize that to work in the academic world you have to go thru an accreditation process for courses. It can take a year or so to do this step.doobes wrote: ↑Sun May 21, 2023 4:48 pm Frankly, SolidWorks AKA Dassault Systemes' has never understood the academic model. AutoDesk gave every university who asked as many seats of Inventor as they wanted, with plenty to share with students. My son has an edu license.
Years ago a friend who was the Dean of the school of Engineering asked me to help him get acesss to SolidWorks for the school. They were using some no name 3D CAD system who author had gone out of business.
I contacted the folks I knew at SolidWorks, and they slope shouldered the whole thing onto the local VAR, MLC CAD.
MLC CAD quoted them $250/seat/year. When told about the Autodesk offer, they shrugged their shoulders.
Guess what they adopted....
LOL!Ryan-3DS wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 9:39 am Most people don't realize that to work in the academic world you have to go thru an accreditation process for courses. It can take a year or so to do this step.
When it comes to edu licensing, it is difficult to find a company that is willing to support the edu customer- because there is NO money for anyone to pay for the support. Combine that with the long lead time for course accreditation and you can see why there is not a lot of interest.
Autodesk saturated the edu system early on. Then they paid the price with 1,000s of seats of pirated software all over the globe. Which then led to the last 10 years of court battles. Annual subscriptions were set up to curtail pirated software.
But if you are interested in academic licenses you can check out this site. https://www.solidworks.com/solution/academia
But I am sure you know there are a couple of 100,000s seats of SolidWorks without subscription still running all over the globe? Old perpetual versions, new cracked versions, Cloned Systems, etc.Ryan-3DS wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 9:39 am Autodesk saturated the edu system early on. Then they paid the price with 1,000s of seats of pirated software all over the globe.https://www.solidworks.com/solution/academia
Like any pirate carry about subscription.
There are only a few place the nasty can hide.RichGergely wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 2:21 pm The biggest problem with pirate software (especially now days) is the potential for something rather nasty hidden in the download.
Surprising. Usually, vendors offer a perpetual license trade-in to get that discount on term. Seems the entire software industry is trying to replace perpetual licenses with term subscription. Some just quite offering maintenance on perpetual altogether so you don't even have a choice...RichGergely wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2023 11:16 am I'm getting offered pretty well zero discount if I renew before July, I have 16 months of backdated renewal costs on top of it.
Here is the crazy thing, if I take out a term license instead, at the moment over 3 years they are offering 50% discount! Of course at the end of the 3 years I would not own that license. Though I would still have the one I own now at the end of the period - 2022 sp1.
Yup..jcapriotti wrote: ↑Wed May 31, 2023 4:06 pm It's called bait and switch. Happened with TV streaming services and some other software. They give discounts to get you to subscribe, then they start raising the prices. At least with TV it's fairly easy to drop services and move to others. Software almost always locks you in and makes it as painful as possible to leave.
I am very disappointed at the whole thing too.Damo wrote: ↑Thu May 11, 2023 10:26 pm At least with other pay as you go services, (think: insurance, utilities, tel-com services, etc.) we have the option of switching providers reasonably easy.
This helps to keep them all fairly competitive and reasonably honest. Nor do we need to swap out our entire internal infrastructure to do so..
Wow..doobes wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 10:07 am LOL!
Reading skills are fundamental.
"Years ago".....
Based upon the fact that I can't even get into my account at SolidWorks today, the likelihood of me recommending SolidWorks to anyone at this juncture is minimal/nonexistent.
I've been a user since '95. Yep. I knew some of the early players. I could name names if you would like. I was a VAR for a short period of time. I introduced the Offshore Oil and Gas Industry to SolidWorks. Seriously.
At one time I was a very vocal proponent of SolidWorks.
That was, however, in the past.
The repeated abuse that has been heaped upon me as a single user by DSS has eliminated that. Lets look at just some of the love:
1) Deprecating the free DraftSight without any notice so that I could at least go buy a stand alone version. That one was very egregious.
2) Eliminating the 2 machine activation. I've got a desktop and a laptop. I can no longer easily use both in my design activities.
3) Eliminating the online license support tools. See #2
I've paid subscription fee's out of my personal checkbook for over 20 years.
Congratulations to DSS for disenfranchising a very long term customer.
I hope it works out for you.....
You skipped one, that to me was the most underhanded.doobes wrote: ↑Mon May 22, 2023 10:07 am LOL!
Reading skills are fundamental.
"Years ago".....
Based upon the fact that I can't even get into my account at SolidWorks today, the likelihood of me recommending SolidWorks to anyone at this juncture is minimal/nonexistent.
I've been a user since '95. Yep. I knew some of the early players. I could name names if you would like. I was a VAR for a short period of time. I introduced the Offshore Oil and Gas Industry to SolidWorks. Seriously.
At one time I was a very vocal proponent of SolidWorks.
That was, however, in the past.
The repeated abuse that has been heaped upon me as a single user by DSS has eliminated that. Lets look at just some of the love:
1) Deprecating the free DraftSight without any notice so that I could at least go buy a stand alone version. That one was very egregious.
2) Eliminating the 2 machine activation. I've got a desktop and a laptop. I can no longer easily use both in my design activities.
3) Eliminating the online license support tools. See #2
I've paid subscription fee's out of my personal checkbook for over 20 years.
Congratulations to DSS for disenfranchising a very long term customer.
I hope it works out for you.....
This happens a lot I'm sure. It happened to our original VAR. They really were a great (small) bunch of guys n gals.
That is still going on in many markets, just not at solidworks any more (seems to be a trend in software tech right now). It's a normal business lifecycle, been going on for centuries.
Because the companies mentioned have never had data breachesThe cloud security is the main attraction cloud based licensing, it follows the ISO standard of security (majority of the big companies like Microsoft, uber etc uses the same data security standard)
What they don't tell you is that in 2 years this feature will be eliminated. At that point, working offline will cost an additional $xxx per license.Damo wrote: ↑Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:11 pm
- I don’t suppose there is an option for “off-line” access to the service if our internet drops out.? (Which it does from time to time.)[/color]
What if I tell you there is, there are times when users have limited or no internet available, for such situations, the cloud SOLIDWORKS has a feature called ‘offline mode’ which lets the user continue their work even with no internet, and once the connection is back, it takes the data to save on cloud then. While using the cloud SW, it creates a local cache in your machine same as desktop, so there is no possibility of losing work or downtime due to internet.
Only way to work reliable with the 3DExperience connected version of SolidWorks, is to work offline all the time, and only go online to keep your software license active for the next offline session.Frederick_Law wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 8:58 am Yea, if you know you'll be offline, you can switch it.
Can't do that when you got offline unexpected.
Or worse, DS went offline.
Pay attention to the statement that the cloud SOLIDWORKS is always on the latest version. This means that currently the cloud SOLIDWORKS is 2023 SP2. You mention that you are using desktop version 2022 SP5. If the files are modified by a newer version of SOLIDWORKS, you may have issues opening the files on your desktop version.Damo wrote: ↑Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:11 pm
Yes, the existing desktop and cloud SOLIDWORKS are exactly same in usage, even the cloud Solidworks is installed in a local machine, yet connected to cloud. The cloud SOLIDWORKS is always on the latest version, so yes, the new user will be able to open existing SW files in cloud SW
- Will that change our files so I cannot use them in our desktop version.?
As I wrote above, it won’t change your files, it will be same format as desktop.
Yep my new VAR has said this is a problem. Being a self-employed consultant myself, many times I have had to load on old versions of Solidworks for my clients benefit.Diaval wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 12:19 pm Pay attention to the statement that the cloud SOLIDWORKS is always on the latest version. This means that currently the cloud SOLIDWORKS is 2023 SP2. You mention that you are using desktop version 2022 SP5. If the files are modified by a newer version of SOLIDWORKS, you may have issues opening the files on your desktop version.
Nice catch there!Diaval wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 12:19 pm Pay attention to the statement that the cloud SOLIDWORKS is always on the latest version. This means that currently the cloud SOLIDWORKS is 2023 SP2. You mention that you are using desktop version 2022 SP5. If the files are modified by a newer version of SOLIDWORKS, you may have issues opening the files on your desktop version.
It was confusing in the SWYM.Diaval wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 12:19 pm Pay attention to the statement that the cloud SOLIDWORKS is always on the latest version. This means that currently the cloud SOLIDWORKS is 2023 SP2. You mention that you are using desktop version 2022 SP5. If the files are modified by a newer version of SOLIDWORKS, you may have issues opening the files on your desktop version.
3DEXPERIENCE SOLIDWORKS (cloud), Collaborative Designer for SOLIDWORKS (Desktop with cloud add-in), and SOLIDWORKS Maker all use the same SW format as SW Desktop. The Maker version is tagged with a watermark that prevents it from being able to be opened by any version other than Maker though.Frederick_Law wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 12:59 pm It was confusing in the SWYM.
Does the Cloud SW use same file format as Desktop SW?
Could the Cloud save file to Desktop format? Or just STEP, ParaSolid?
Or Maker is the one with different file format?
Well, the confusion is their fault because they've made all of this as clear as mud.jcapriotti wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 4:24 pm There is confusion here on "cloud". There is desktop "cloud connected" SolidWorks which what we use today with an add-in that connects to the 3dx cloud to work on files located there. I'm guess files are cached locally somewhere so it acts as a lite PDMish type tool.
Then there is "Cloud" SolidWorks aka xDesign, xShape, xSheetmetal etc. which is the native in the cloud application (browser based) that is broken up into a bunch of modules that you have to pay for individually. Looks to me to be online Catia rebranded with SolidWorks terminology. This data cannot be read by desktopworks other than as dumb solid bodies, no features.
Solidworks "Cloud Connected", is the one they imply will come with all new solidworks purchases..jcapriotti wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 4:24 pm There is confusion here on "cloud". There is desktop "cloud connected" SolidWorks which what we use today with an add-in that connects to the 3dx cloud to work on files located there. I'm guess files are cached locally somewhere so it acts as a lite PDMish type tool.
Then there is "Cloud" SolidWorks aka xDesign, xShape, xSheetmetal etc. which is the native in the cloud application (browser based) that is broken up into a bunch of modules that you have to pay for individually. Looks to me to be online Catia rebranded with SolidWorks terminology. This data cannot be read by desktopworks other than as dumb solid bodies, no features.
OOOOooooo This is a VERY good point.. And one suspiciously I'm sure my reseller just kinda glossed over, hoping we would discover the hard way and NEED to pay, maybe..?Diaval wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 12:19 pm Pay attention to the statement that the cloud SOLIDWORKS is always on the latest version. This means that currently the cloud SOLIDWORKS is 2023 SP2. You mention that you are using desktop version 2022 SP5. If the files are modified by a newer version of SOLIDWORKS, you may have issues opening the files on your desktop version.
This is you confirming the reality of Diaval's comment..?RichGergely wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 12:33 pm Yep my new VAR has said this is a problem. Being a self-employed consultant myself, many times I have had to load on old versions of Solidworks for my clients benefit.
This definitely was conveniently omitted.. Did you learn this from your reseller.? or is this documented somewhere we can all read..?
As above.. Is this documented somewhere.? Or do you have first-hand experience..?Frederick_Law wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 8:58 am Yea, if you know you'll be offline, you can switch it.
Can't do that when you got offline unexpected.
Or worse, DS went offline.
Frank.Frank_Oostendorp wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 9:11 am Only way to work reliable with the 3DExperience connected version of SolidWorks, is to work offline all the time, and only go online to keep your software license active for the next offline session.