Thanks for clarifying the Twinmotion and Enscape are low end renders, I very commonly end up in arguments where these two software's are compared with Vray, Corona and Fstorm Render. I will show them this video and hopefully it helps
When I was studying, we were taught Revit because Revit is the future. At the time, most companies were hiring with Archicad experience. I landed myself a job in a company that uses Archicad. I had never used Archicad, but taught myself on the job. Now most companies are hiring with a Revit background. I only ever use Archicad and Enscape now. it depends on what the end product is, and that all we (the company) needs to get by. I found transferring Revit to Archicad is easy but the other way would be a little harder.
The holy trinity: Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign. They still dominate the market because it’s hard to change programs in an office. (Trust me I tried) But Affinity Photo, Designer, Publisher is on the rise and they’re just $150 for all 3 (forever, no subscription). You don’t need Acrobat because Bluebeam is the far superior PDF software in offices. But both Adobe and Affinity does the same thing and works. I personally have Affinity 2 and it’s amazing. Some tools are even better than Adobe’s. Sorry for the segmented comments. I was the Technology Leader at my old company determine which software we keep, adopt, or get rid of.
I am currently in my last year of architecture studies in Belgrade, Serbia and I realized that I lack knowledge in using the programs. I set myself a goal to learn Rhino 3d in combination with Revit during the holidays. I'm currently following "Adam" on RUclips and learning the commands step by step. I don't know Revit, but I have a feeling that it is similar to Archicad, and i use already Enscape for renders and Photoshop for everything else. I realized that it would be easier for me to learn programs if I set up a headset... like for example to do some project for an exam. I hope there are still people who look at it that way Ps. It seems to me that your origin is from the Balkans, because we have a lot of people with the surname Tomić
I am indeed originally from bosnia. I also have the same learning style as you hence why I have made a lot of full project follow along videos for archicad on this channel
I had to stop eating lunch to write this. I’ve been in the field about 15 years and have been working mostly on the east coast in the US. If you’re in that region, don’t bother with Archicad unless you like working in very small boutique firms. If you’re a student, I would say invest your time in Revit because that’s what the major companies use. Your journey only really begins when you get into a firm because collaboration and understanding company standards is trumps personal knowledge learned through school. Learning at school is good to get your feet wet but there’s a whole world out there that tutorials can’t teach. Just be confident in what you know during the interview. You don’t need to be the best at Revit to get hired, you just need to be honest with what you know, a faster learner and a team player. People will be able to size you up quick in an office so no need to fake it til you make it. That kind of pretentiousness will make you lose points with your future co-workers. Good Luck!
I have to stop again to respond to twin motion vs. enscape. 90% of offices use Enscape. Most people in the offices of the region I’m from haven’t even heard of twin motion. Enscape all the way and it’s super simple. That’s why people use it.
I also havily recoment Rhino. It has no worth in planing, bu ist the strongest in concept & design. Other architectural CADs have huge problems with unconventional geometrys or shapes. Its simply the best way to look easy and fast if a concept works or doesnt
I can say that I can handle Revit did allot of project in the software but now Im learning Archicad I wanna try it it looks cool, justo draw in Autocad then Autocad architeture then I went to Revit, for rendering I was render waay back with Mental ray in 3dsmax then with Iray I did try V-ray then Corona also did try Sting ray it come out like 1 year layer after unreal 4 come out I think it ia also a game engine but it went dead after a year I think it has potential but Autodesk pull the plug on it now playing with Enscape, Twinmotiom,D5 , but the one im going all im is Unreal 5.1 its just mind blowing that game.engine and freeeeeeeee what more do you want I thinking about going to learn blender whem I finish Archicad I think Evee in blender have great potential for real time
@@DavidTomic aha blender looks awesome every update they make pretty solid updates, and also is free🤷♂️ I just got bored sometime using the same method of workin thats why Im switching or learning here and there, I wish Enscape go in to 3dsmax in the future its great plugin but who knows maybe now they have the resource now that they merge with Chaos group finger crossed
helpful as always! it's nice to gain insight about what programs I should dedicate as early as now in order to increase my chances for a fruitful career in this field, thank you!
Thanks for clarifying the Twinmotion and Enscape are low end renders, I very commonly end up in arguments where these two software's are compared with Vray, Corona and Fstorm Render. I will show them this video and hopefully it helps
They both have the potential to be more and will most likely end up being something special but for now I consider them low to middle end at best
Affinity photo affinity, designer, and affinity publisher!
Great alternative
found those last week and just starting on them! much cheaper, same result. (for what i need as an architect)
@@Fabio_MCM I'm Happy for you...
When I was studying, we were taught Revit because Revit is the future. At the time, most companies were hiring with Archicad experience. I landed myself a job in a company that uses Archicad. I had never used Archicad, but taught myself on the job. Now most companies are hiring with a Revit background. I only ever use Archicad and Enscape now. it depends on what the end product is, and that all we (the company) needs to get by. I found transferring Revit to Archicad is easy but the other way would be a little harder.
Most universities teach revit as there is more funding and marketing around it, which means more lecturers and tutors who can show the students.
The holy trinity: Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign. They still dominate the market because it’s hard to change programs in an office. (Trust me I tried) But Affinity Photo, Designer, Publisher is on the rise and they’re just $150 for all 3 (forever, no subscription). You don’t need Acrobat because Bluebeam is the far superior PDF software in offices. But both Adobe and Affinity does the same thing and works. I personally have Affinity 2 and it’s amazing. Some tools are even better than Adobe’s. Sorry for the segmented comments. I was the Technology Leader at my old company determine which software we keep, adopt, or get rid of.
I am currently in my last year of architecture studies in Belgrade, Serbia and I realized that I lack knowledge in using the programs. I set myself a goal to learn Rhino 3d in combination with Revit during the holidays. I'm currently following "Adam" on RUclips and learning the commands step by step. I don't know Revit, but I have a feeling that it is similar to Archicad, and i use already Enscape for renders and Photoshop for everything else.
I realized that it would be easier for me to learn programs if I set up a headset... like for example to do some project for an exam. I hope there are still people who look at it that way
Ps. It seems to me that your origin is from the Balkans, because we have a lot of people with the surname Tomić
I am indeed originally from bosnia.
I also have the same learning style as you hence why I have made a lot of full project follow along videos for archicad on this channel
I had to stop eating lunch to write this. I’ve been in the field about 15 years and have been working mostly on the east coast in the US. If you’re in that region, don’t bother with Archicad unless you like working in very small boutique firms. If you’re a student, I would say invest your time in Revit because that’s what the major companies use. Your journey only really begins when you get into a firm because collaboration and understanding company standards is trumps personal knowledge learned through school.
Learning at school is good to get your feet wet but there’s a whole world out there that tutorials can’t teach. Just be confident in what you know during the interview. You don’t need to be the best at Revit to get hired, you just need to be honest with what you know, a faster learner and a team player. People will be able to size you up quick in an office so no need to fake it til you make it. That kind of pretentiousness will make you lose points with your future co-workers. Good Luck!
Revit is not for design, only documentation/production. As an architect, I could never sacrifice Rhino for design.
Your the best bro 🌹
Glad I could help!
Very helpful as always
Glad to help mate!
I have to stop again to respond to twin motion vs. enscape. 90% of offices use Enscape. Most people in the offices of the region I’m from haven’t even heard of twin motion. Enscape all the way and it’s super simple. That’s why people use it.
I also havily recoment Rhino. It has no worth in planing, bu ist the strongest in concept & design. Other architectural CADs have huge problems with unconventional geometrys or shapes. Its simply the best way to look easy and fast if a concept works or doesnt
For conceptual stage 100% agree
Please do a video on how you would present yourself in those 3 minutes, thank you
As long ad you're prepared to be in and out within 3 minutes, nobody actually stick to it, it is just your in
Can you make a simple tutorial for full architectural documentation on ArchiCad.
That video would be days long!
@@DavidTomic
Are you able to cut it into segments. Probably, 10minutes per segments and call it part 1, part 2, part 3, etc.
I can say that I can handle Revit did allot of project in the software but now Im learning Archicad I wanna try it it looks cool, justo draw in Autocad then Autocad architeture then I went to Revit, for rendering I was render waay back with Mental ray in 3dsmax then with Iray I did try V-ray then Corona also did try Sting ray it come out like 1 year layer after unreal 4 come out I think it ia also a game engine but it went dead after a year I think it has potential but Autodesk pull the plug on it now playing with Enscape, Twinmotiom,D5 , but the one im going all im is Unreal 5.1 its just mind blowing that game.engine and freeeeeeeee what more do you want I thinking about going to learn blender whem I finish Archicad I think Evee in blender have great potential for real time
Blender has huge potential and again free! Looks like you’ve got most of your program bases covered haha
@@DavidTomic aha blender looks awesome every update they make pretty solid updates, and also is free🤷♂️ I just got bored sometime using the same method of workin thats why Im switching or learning here and there, I wish Enscape go in to 3dsmax in the future its great plugin but who knows maybe now they have the resource now that they merge with Chaos group finger crossed
helpful as always! it's nice to gain insight about what programs I should dedicate as early as now in order to increase my chances for a fruitful career in this field, thank you!
Glad you enjoyed the video mate!
Can you please review the Adobe illustrator and indesign
What would you like to know?
@@DavidTomic how the apps work and how to use the apps
many thx
Most welcome
As much as my biased side is kicking back I have to admit you said it true
I do try haha
Can i have your 3 minutes ? 🤣
Jump on the discord group chat you'll get more than 3 minutes haha