tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20046520.post127519936042794092..comments2023-09-01T04:07:19.577-05:00Comments on CAD Shack: Revit in a BrowserTodd M. Shackelfordhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02135634177916022070noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20046520.post-13410586982205891232013-11-13T12:26:24.220-06:002013-11-13T12:26:24.220-06:00"Certainly that data can still reside on your..."Certainly that data can still reside on your firm's servers" ~ so let's break that down: We would have to 'dial out' to get access to some software, then thru that program, dial back into our own server to access the files. Is that efficient or forward-thinking?<br /><br />The analogy to finances breaks down pretty quickly. My money is just a liquid asset, and it's guaranteed by FDIC. If it's lost, it will be replaced, up to $250k. If design data is lost, it can't be so easily replaced, it has to be re-built. Further, autodesk explicitly refuses to take responsibility for losing ANY of your data, should that happen on their servers.<br /><br />Here's the real kick in the snout, tho: From autodesk's 360 license: “You hereby grant Autodesk (or warrant that the licensor of such rights has expressly granted) a perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, royalty-free, paid-up, worldwide, sublicensable (through multiple tiers) license to store, display, reproduce, modify, use and transmit Your Content, and further waive “moral” rights or other rights with respect to attribution of authorship or integrity of Your Content that You may have under any applicable law and under any legal theory.”<br /><br />If you have clients paying you to design their buildings, which of your clients would utterly relinquish control of the design for which they are paying? Has anyone asked THEM? Coupling this truth (that autodesk wants complete control) with the fact that autodesk wants to bear ZERO responsibility for any data loss makes for a very one-sided 'agreement', that benefits ONLY autodesk. The sole purpose for the cloud is to prevent software piracy - all the flaws can be papered over by the attorneys.Peter in Marylandnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20046520.post-14974176924920175582013-11-11T21:29:38.034-06:002013-11-11T21:29:38.034-06:00Certainly that data can still reside on your firm&...Certainly that data can still reside on your firm's servers. There are a lot of options for keeping data safe in private clouds and the such. I propose this. Where is your money? Chances are you and your firm have virtualized your money years ago and you don't share the same fear you might for virualizing your design data. It's an observation.Todd M Shackelfordhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06675174836957357445noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20046520.post-14283972474650257222013-11-11T12:20:46.587-06:002013-11-11T12:20:46.587-06:00If the program lives on a remote server farm, wher...If the program lives on a remote server farm, where does the actual data reside? We definitely cannot permit our client's confidential and secure building design to be stored outside of our server. So how does this make sense at all, unless you surrender all control of your data to the always-shareholder-friendly autodesk?Peter in Marylandnoreply@blogger.com