Hi Dave, Thank you very much for these very honest statements! Your videos are very helpful, they get straight to the point. I'm really looking forward to future videos with the explanations that will help me to keep track of things in the little jungle of PTC products. Keep up the good work!
I can assure you, the UI is not intentionally opaque. I have known product managers at PTC going back 2 decades, and they are good people who work hard to bring users the best product development functionality on the market. As I have said many times, it’s a trade off between advanced functionality and a simple UI. It’s an unfair assertion against people who work hard at their jobs to say that they are making the UI intentionally opaque. I encourage you to attend PTC events, either live or virtually, to meet the people behind the software. I think that will change your opinion regarding their intentions.
Unbelievable that PTC is not giving you the Creo license for free. Your content is actually miles better than the official content from PTC academy (low quality videos done in low cost countries). I'm a Creo user but it saddens me how terrible their marketing department is.
They do provide me with a license when I'm doing work for them. But it has been quite a few months since then. That's why I have to maintain my own personal license. I wonder what the future of CAD training is. Companies won't send their employees to 3-5 days of training anymore. And the lecture - demo - exercise training model doesn't seem to work with modern audiences either. Companies also have unrealistic expectations. A couple weeks ago, I talked to a company that wanted realistically 15-20 days of training, with a lot of content custom developed for their industry, but they wanted it delivered in a couple days before the end of the year. It's a complicated situation all around.
Thanks. But as I have said, the CAD wars need to end. A couple friends of mine founded startups, and I actually recommended Inventor to them. For $2300, they get CAD, CAM, and FEA. (The same FEA as in Siemens SimCenter.) And one of them came back and said it was the right recommendation for him, since it was totally geared toward creating new products. Creo is great, but we don’t have to cut down other CAD packages for it to be great.
Thanks so much for all of the tutorials you've put out.
Thanks for watching.
I thank you for your efforts and the time you spend to teach us creo.
Few words of appreciation is the least thing to do.
Hi Dave,
Thank you very much for these very honest statements!
Your videos are very helpful, they get straight to the point.
I'm really looking forward to future videos with the explanations that will help me to keep track of things in the little jungle of PTC products.
Keep up the good work!
Thank you for your videos. You helped me a lot.
I’m glad to hear that. It’s literally why the channel exists. I’m happy it’s serving its purpose.
Thank you very much for your work! You helped me a lot on the work during transition from Solidworks to Creo.
Great! I have an upcoming video on the SolidWorks to Creo connection.
Hvala.
Thank you!
Sir you're doing amazing work❤
Thanks. I appreciate that.
I really like your videos! The Creo user interface seems intentionally opaque and your video library is a go-to source for how-to knwoledge.
I can assure you, the UI is not intentionally opaque. I have known product managers at PTC going back 2 decades, and they are good people who work hard to bring users the best product development functionality on the market. As I have said many times, it’s a trade off between advanced functionality and a simple UI. It’s an unfair assertion against people who work hard at their jobs to say that they are making the UI intentionally opaque. I encourage you to attend PTC events, either live or virtually, to meet the people behind the software. I think that will change your opinion regarding their intentions.
Thanks dude!
My teacher,, you are great!
Thank you very much.
Unbelievable that PTC is not giving you the Creo license for free. Your content is actually miles better than the official content from PTC academy (low quality videos done in low cost countries).
I'm a Creo user but it saddens me how terrible their marketing department is.
They do provide me with a license when I'm doing work for them. But it has been quite a few months since then. That's why I have to maintain my own personal license.
I wonder what the future of CAD training is. Companies won't send their employees to 3-5 days of training anymore. And the lecture - demo - exercise training model doesn't seem to work with modern audiences either. Companies also have unrealistic expectations. A couple weeks ago, I talked to a company that wanted realistically 15-20 days of training, with a lot of content custom developed for their industry, but they wanted it delivered in a couple days before the end of the year.
It's a complicated situation all around.
Thanks man!!
And remember Creo is far better than inventor.
Thanks. But as I have said, the CAD wars need to end. A couple friends of mine founded startups, and I actually recommended Inventor to them. For $2300, they get CAD, CAM, and FEA. (The same FEA as in Siemens SimCenter.) And one of them came back and said it was the right recommendation for him, since it was totally geared toward creating new products. Creo is great, but we don’t have to cut down other CAD packages for it to be great.
In for the free consultations :).
Hello sir,
Im currently pursuing mechanical engineering
Im interested in designing
Give me 3 tips that you think you needed when u were a beginner
Tip #1: learn how to ask for mentoring and advice in a polite and professional manner.
@@CADPLMGuy ok... I didn't mean to offend you
Hope you get it🙏
@CADPLMGuy
I didn't mean to offend you... Hope you get it🙏
Thanks dude!
Thank you!