Revit is a powerful design tool. Conceptually, it is a "data model." As such, the management of the information provided by the model must be done under a protocol. In this, the recommendations of RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) are useful for creating such a protocol. All this, thinking about a BIM environment. On the other hand, although Autocad is not a BIM-born tool, with an adequate protocol, it can be added to the BIM "ecosystem." Many professionals still use it and it is a waste not to gain valuable experience just by not using Revit or another tool. Once again, the use of a protocol to standardize and coordinate people, processes and tools is key. Thumbs up for this podcast! 👍
Revit is a powerful design tool. Conceptually, it is a "data model." As such, the management of the information provided by the model must be done under a protocol. In this, the recommendations of RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) are useful for creating such a protocol. All this, thinking about a BIM environment.
On the other hand, although Autocad is not a BIM-born tool, with an adequate protocol, it can be added to the BIM "ecosystem." Many professionals still use it and it is a waste not to gain valuable experience just by not using Revit or another tool. Once again, the use of a protocol to standardize and coordinate people, processes and tools is key. Thumbs up for this podcast! 👍
Thank you for the explanation and for appreciation 👍👍