- Wed Jul 12, 2006 5:59 pm
#170412
Anyone is CRAZY to spend the money on Alias products...I have used Studio tools for 10+ years, and have since switched to rhino full time. Alias crashes CONSTANTLY, makes parts that are very difficult to stitch (necessary for RP output) and STILL does not have a reliable fillet tool. The tolerance settings are very complicated, and getting data to transfer to different cad packages is an unbelievable pain in the ass.
Since switching to Rhino, I have NEVER had an sla part fail, NEVER had a data transfer issue, and NEVER had a client complain about my data in any way. Rhino is not a "toy" program or in any way less powerful...In my highly biased opinion it is not only more powerful than Alias, it saves me time, and money on a daily basis with it's ease of use. It just works...no hassels, no fuss. Alias used to piss me off every day...
The addition of V4 will end this argument forever...the UDT deformation tools are freekin' amazing and have saved me DAYS of rework to modify files to clients spec. It just keeps getting better and better and better...
One major difference is that Rhino was completely re-written on a new kernal at v3. Alias is still running on a kernal that is about 25 years old. It has been cut, patched, and modified so much in that time period that it runs like an old version of DOS.
I was a total alias bigot and thought all other programs were inferior until I got fed up with spending days to get a part to stitch. I tried it in rhino...stitched first time in about 5 min... I never looked back.
for the money you would spend on Studio tools ($7500+ for design studio...which is seriously limited as opposed to Auto studio $25k+) you can get a new computer, a wide screen monitor, an aeron chair, 2 seats of rhino a seat of maxwell, an xbox 360, and a Harley Sportster...and STILL have money left....
Anyone who is dissing this program or thinks it is a "concept modeler" needs to try it...you will be amazed. It is heavy duty, industrial strength.
-Kyle Houchens
The Outside Digital art and design
www.theoutside.biz