![]() ![]() ![]() I think I wanted it to be a little more intuitive in the same way I would like SW to be a little more analytic. Perhaps I am overly familiar with SW but I found the SE UI a bit methodical and sometimes obtuse.įirstly I am not a ribbon fan which always seems to me like something devised by someone with a compulsive/obsessive disorder for their sock drawer and secondly I found it a little…chanical. ![]() They want to reaccess variables directly and stretch forms about. Mechanical people want to plonk a weld or a ground edge here or there that does a specific job whereas designers want to mess with stuff until it looks right. I liked conic blends a lot however they could be set up to be more editable after the fact. Unfortunately it lacks some capability for people who want to get immersed in surfacing. ![]() While I did find a lot of what I needed is available in SE it *is* obviously best suited to machine design. Can’t fault them for their friendly marketing.Īlthough I was slightly disappointed it wasnt more useful for my own purposes I am sure many companies would like what they found in SE. I must say too although the hardware I used was fairly old SE ran quite well on it.Īnyway thanks to Seimens for the opportunity to try it out. No complaints about that aspect considering. I must say the uninstall went better than I anticipated with only a few empty folders remaining and one conspicuous registry entry. I also wanted to use the 3gb HD space on my old PC I use for evaluation for other activities… Today I uninstalled SE having determined after some experimentation it wasn’t what I personally needed as a replacement for SW for ID stuff at least in its present state. Here few article from 2005 explaining the Stream concept. By reducing perceptual inputs and focusing on decision-making, it helps users devote more processing resources towards their design problems…” “….Stream/XP is more than just a “look and feel.” It is a user interface based on the well-known fact that humans process information in three stages: perception, decision-making, and response. It is that little thing that you cannot put you finger on. The feeling you have that the software guide you, is part of the personality of the software. Your opinion sound fair to me and it reflect what we get in general from people. ![]()
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