Launching two years ago, Fusion 360 has become one of the most interesting systems to watch develop. This saw a combination of cloud-enabled software that uses the cloud to do what it does best - centralise data, enable project collaboration and, in a few cases, improve computation capability. Fusion became part of Autodesk’s cloud-based plans and the future of the system became the core of the company’s 360 initiative. Then somewhere along the line, things changed. It was delivered as a traditional software system - download, install, go. Partly an experiment to see how its community of users would use such tools, and partly a reaction against the (at least then) new moves from SpaceClaim and Siemens in that direction. It began as a technology preview on Autodesk Labs, offering Autodesk’s take on the direct modelling movement. The tweaked interface now combines solid and t-splines modelling into a single toolbar
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