Matt Berggren from Autodesk will be hosting the Hack Chat on Wednesday, April 10, 2019 at noon PDT.
Time zones got you down? Here's a handy time converter!
Most of us have a collection of tools that we use for the various mechanical, electronic, and manufacturing tasks we face daily. But if you were asked to name one tool that stretches across all these spaces, Autodesk Fusion 360 would certainly spring to mind. Everyone from casual designers of 3D-printed widgets to commercial CNC machine shops use it as an end to end design solution, and anyone who has used it over the last year or so knows that the feature set in Fusion is expanding rapidly.
Matt, who goes by technolomaniac on Hackaday.io, is Director of Product Development for EAGLE, Tinkercad, and Fusion 360 at Autodesk. He'll drop by the Hack Chat this week to discuss your questions about:
- All the Autodesk design software components, from EAGLE to Fusion and beyond;
- Future plans for an EAGLE-Fusion integration;
- Support for manufacturing, including additive, CNC, and even mold making; and
- Will there ever be "one design tool to rule them all?"
Basic but deeply serious question on the minds of makers everywhere- when are you guys going to follow through on sanity for the entire world maker crowd, and add native linux support?
I had a fusion 360 license only a year ago and I got tired of dual booting into windows every time I wanted to do work, but because Windows is inherently insecure having to boot back into Linux to do anything else.
I don't even trust a Windows computer to connect to the internet normally.
I am tired of hearing the excuse there isn't anyone who uses Linux. Look at where are you are having this hack chat, as you try to engage the maker community which is sizable worldwide and many of us use only Linux or mainly Linux. I would pay for a regular subscription to fusion 360 or buy an outright license to inventor right now if either of them worked natively in Linux. I am looking to start my own business in the next 5 years and would use your software but I will not until it is supported in Linux. I'm not compromising my computer and my data anymore with Windows and I haven't for the last 15 years. A lot of others think the same way. You are missing out on a large part of the maker market by actively spurning linux.