This offer may not be combined with any conditions or discounts offered under the Major Account programme.ĪUTODESK RESERVES THE RIGHT TO CANCEL, SUSPEND OR MODIFY PART OF OR THESE ENTIRE PROMOTIONS AT ANY TIME WITHOUT NOTICE, FOR ANY REASON AT ITS SOLE DISCRETION. This promotion is not valid for product licences purchased through the Autodesk Employee Purchase Programme. Products must be purchased from Autodesk online store and the applicable discount will automatically appear in your basket. EMEA eStores include Educational licences including new, upgrades and migrations, and education-to-commercial transfers do not qualify. This offer is available from 6/28/22 through 7/29/22 on Autodesk EMEA eStores and may not be combined with other rebates or promotions and is void where prohibited or restricted by law. Let’s see where things go.This promotion offers a 20% discount off the Suggested Retail Price (SRP) for purchases of a 1- or 3-year subscription to Fusion 360, HSMWorks, EAGLE and a 30% discount off the Suggested Retail Price (SRP) for a 1-year subscription to the following products (excluding taxes): Fusion 360 Machining Extension, Fusion 360 Nesting & Fabrication Extension, Fusion 360 Manage Extension, Fusion 360 Generative Design Extension, Fusion 360 Product Design Extension, Fusion 360 Simulation Extension and Fusion 360 Additive Build Extension, excluding taxes. Fusion now has its main track of Fusion 360 out there, but Project Leopard in beta as well. Right at the moment, it looks like Autodesk, rather than issuing slightly snarky blog posts, is looking to tackle Onshape on its key differentiator.Īnd when that sort of thing happens, we get interesting developments and those developments tend to accelerate. What will be interesting is to see how two develop in the coming months, how pricing and technology adapts and see where Autodesk get to with Project Leopard. So, as we discussed back in April, there’s a normalisation happening. When they said “First to the cloud” what they really meant was “First to go full browser”. Onshape took advantage of that and made a lot of “we’re first” claims that didn’t really stack up to close inspection. The truth is that “the cloud” is an amorphous term and means different things to different folks. In fact, its pretty clear that Onshape’s claims to be the “first cloud-based design system” rankled some at Autodesk. Onshape on the other hand, has always made a big thing about it being “the first and only full-cloud 3D CAD system”. Fusion has, until now, been a client-based system with serious hooks into the cloud. ![]() ![]() When it comes to cloud-based design systems, there’s currently two front runners – Autodesk with Fusion 360 and Onshape’s eponymously titled system. You should also note that we’ve not had much in the way of access to this yet, so we’ve not giving too much detail until we’ve spent some time with it. That’s something we know, from our own research, is what’s driving an interest in the cloud-based technologies. ![]() This looks to be about giving folks access to their data and tools in those cases where they need them and the software isn’t to hand, can’t be installed or in emergencies. It’s also key that this shouldn’t be seen as “Fusion Moving to the Browser”. The Project Leopard UI – worth noting that there’s some differences to Fusion 360 – note the modelling history in the more traditional position on the right hand side, vertically.
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