Often I spent a little time with something interesting and come back to it later) (If the 8 hours is starting from the first time it's open and running out a clock, that's - really not optimal. Odds are I'm just not your intended customer, no worries - but if this is an unintended result of how you've defined the trial period - bump it up to a manager to consider? I might then want to trial of SketchUp Pro, intensively, for a few hours a day over a few weeks (not that I can imagine buying it, but I could well recommend it to people who'd trust my opinion). THEN I'd want to see if the additional tools interested me, once I felt I'd mastered the basic tool. I might take weeks or months as a dilettante, before I total eight total hours of use with just the basic Make options. Jacob WilliamsĮven assuming the trial allow 8 hours of actual use of Pro - rather than a third of a 24-hour day - forcing it at the very beginning means wasting a lot of it learning the basic free stuff. Very amped and jazzed about everything going on. I love the dropdown tab to diffferent industry examples at the top. We'd be thrilled to give feedback anytime. I have a business with three modelers on the program. I would love to be apart of the testing development team. They're barely keeping up with inflation anyhow. I noticed the Pro price increase from $500 to $590. I did purchase the Pro Version once revenue was made. When really, SketchUpMake is a full fledged program capable of running a business with. People assume they're getting half a program. That way people get the idea of SketchUpFree out of their heads. It's good to distinguish the two versions like this. Have questions about SketchUp Make? We’ll be listening here and on this thread in our help forum. We’ve added a batch of new features to the 2013 release of SketchUp Make (check out our new STL import|export extension, for example) and we’re looking forward to developing and supporting it well into the future. And it is in honor of the Maker movement that we’re re-launching our free 3D design tool under the new name “ SketchUp Make.”īut really, there isn’t much else changing here-SketchUp Make is still free for non-commercial use, still powerful and still under active development. We’ve been a part of Dale’s movement since the beginning, and we’re in it for the long run. We call them “Makers,” a term coined by Dale Dougherty and his gang at Make. SketchUp Make: Used by people who make things (sometimes even to make things that make things)Īs it turns out, there’s now a name for this diversely creative and inventive group of folks who have been using SketchUp for years. Truly we’re seeing “3D for everyone” playing out at a grand scale. On top of it all, SketchUp can be used by kids to design the best pinewood derby racers ever. Not only has it become a tool of choice for 3D printing enthusiasts, it’s been used to design the printers themselves, helping to kick off a broader revolution in personal manufacturing. It has also been used to launch ocean cleaning drones. We found that SketchUp has been used to plan structures at Burning Man. While there are certainly communities of folks who still use SketchUp as a “geo-modeling” tool for Google Earth, the reality is that that this kind of use has only ever represented a small subset of all the things people are actually doing with it. Read that again if you need minute for it to sink in… SketchUp is used almost a billion times a year. Today more than 30 million people a year use SketchUp in a dozen different languages, at a rate of almost 40 starts per second. In the past six years or so, its user base has grown into the millions and spread around the world. This new version of SketchUp cost nothing to use-and because SketchUp is SketchUp-anyone could learn how to do so in almost no time at all.Īs most folks probably now know, the free version of SketchUp has been a huge success. One of the biggest features we added was actually something we took away… the price tag. In 2006, just a few weeks after we closed our original acquisition by Google, we introduced a slimmed-down new version of SketchUp that allowed people to quickly and easily build 3D models of the buildings that mattered to them for representation in Earth.
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