Showing posts with label AUGIWorld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AUGIWorld. Show all posts

Thursday, May 03, 2012

Monday, April 02, 2012

AUGI World - Tips to Leverage Data Efficiently

Check out Emy McGann's article in the March Edition of AUGI World "Tips to Leverage Data Efficiently". Skip to page 33 to get the low down on some elegant Revit MEP tips and tricks to try with the data in your model.


Oh yeah, there are a lot of other great articles in there as well like Jay Zallan's "The Ultimate Revit Hand: Every Revit Tip, Trick, Technique & Workaround (known & unknown)".


All right close up this window and get on with the learning. 

Friday, January 20, 2012

New Year - New AUGI World

The January edition of AUGI World is available online now.  It's chalked full of great articles by good looking authors. Download or view it online today and stay ahead of the pack. Here are some of my favorites;


Joel Londenberg 
Plumbing Systems for Well-Documented Flow

Steve Bennett -
Ini or Outie? Advancing Your Customization of the Revit ini File


Louisa Holland 
AutoCAD System Variable Superstars
 

Thursday, December 22, 2011

December AUGIWorld features Industry Insights

The December issue of AUGIWorld serves up plenty of perspective from industry professionals.

In "Halfway to Paperless," Bryan Thompson offers his solution for getting us beyond just talking about a paperless office and actually realizing it. 

Melinda Heavrin, AutoCAD Architecture expert, thoroughly discusses "Material Matters" within the product. In "Stuck in Neutral, Christopher Fugitt offers his view on AutoCAD Civil 3D and what is needed to make that product all it could be. 

Super Families: A Kit of Parts - Many Revit users find families difficult to master. Author Nicholas Kramer makes the concept easy to grasp by breaking it down into parts. 

Advanced Rendering in Revit - Kyle Benedict plumbs the depths of producing presentations using tools within Revit.


and a small offering from yours truly...
Getting to the Next Level - creating a BIM environment goes far beyond implementing Revit and calling it done. Firms will need to spend money, spend time, and build a culture of embracing change, says the author I call me.