The format of embedded videos within the text of the PDF has been called “hands-down the best way to learn” SketchUp. Thousands of people have shortened the learning curve by using my books, especially the “Woodworker’s Guide to SketchUp”. If that works for you, that’s a good thing. Lots of folks have figured out how to use SketchUp on their own or by watching free videos online. The Instructor window (the “cap and gown” icon near the top of the toolbar on the right of the screen walks you the the steps of using any active tool. When you hover your cursor over an icon its name appears and if you click the small right-pointing arrow the icons for similar tools appear. In the web-based versions of SketchUp some of the tool icons live behind others. If you’re just starting out, there are a lot of helps withing the program. I preach a good foundation in the basics so you understand the nature of stuff in the model, how to recognize what you click on and how to get around the model so you can see what you’re doing. In all the versions of SketchUp, the functional differences from one version to another are minimal. For you, the speed and reliability of your internet connection are an important link in the chain. That’s how I use SketchUp and I didn’t have any issues with the program bogging down or lagging, even with a large model. If you know the existing keyboard shortcuts to SketchUp ( click here for my shortcut cheat sheet) and know how to navigate the model space using the scroll wheel of the mouse ( click here for a free lesson in Navigation in SketchUp) you won’t spend a lot of time hunting down the tool you want to use. In SketchUp free the interface has been simplified and streamlined so there aren’t as many options. In the downloadable versions of SketchUp there are usually several ways to get to any specific tool or operation. It’s a good idea to click on the big question mark in the lower left corner of the screen and launch the “Welcome Tour”. The relevant questions are “Does the web version work”? “How different is it from the previous versions”? and “What’s the best way to learn how to use it”?Īt first glance, “SketchUp Free” seems to be missing a lot, compared to the desktop version, but almost everything is there if you can figure out where it lives. It might not be the business model I would choose, but it isn’t my business. What a private enterprise decides to do with their products, particularly what they give away for free is not for me (or any other SketchUp user) to decide. I’ve been asked what I think of this, what I think members of my audience should do and are my enhanced PDF books about using SketchUp relevant to the new online versions? While I use the software and write extensively about SketchUp I have no financial ties to the company. Recently the good folks at SketchUp made some changes to their product lineup and business model. When I learned how to create 3D models with SketchUp most of what I do professionally is better - faster, more accurate and more versatile in terms of output that can be shared digitally and in print. I go way back to manual drafting and AutoCAD. I’m a fan of the usefulness and versatility of the software, and in spite of recent changes I still am. One thing that affects me is I don’t like change, but change is one of the few constants in life, so like it or not I adapt.įor the last ten years or so I’ve been teaching classes in SketchUp and publishing instructional books about using SketchUp efficiently. I depend on software to create and edit and I also teach folks how to use SketchUp 3D modeling software. Software updates and changes to business models by software companies are something we should all be used to, but for a lot of us (including me) news of something different fills us with dread. The web-based version of SketchUp “SketchUp Free” is at the top of this image, the desktop version is at the bottom.
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