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Friday, November 06, 2009
Sometimes the Best Things are Free, Learning Courses Available on AutoCAD Exchange
Between the Lines: "We have been adding many new features and content to the AutoCAD Exchange. Some of the new content includes new funny Roger Penwill Misunderstood CAD Manager cartoons, Lynn Allen’s hilarious Top Ten Reasons to attend AU videos, AutoCAD Help online, AU courses, weekly Ask the Expert to ask questions to. Donnie Gladfelter is this weeks resident AutoCAD Expert."
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4 comments:
This is definitely a good addition to elearning's repertoire. I would frequent the site a few years ago and it had several useful things. It's good to have a flat out curriculum all in one place rather than just try to find different things on the same subject and filter out what you can use and what isn't relevant all by yourself. I'd recommend sites like this for anyone who wants to learn a general overview about a subject rather than just visiting different sites for sparse information (although that is still useful).
I have always been a proponent of googling questions about how to make photoshop, final cut, or dreamweaver do something. However, i have had little to no experience with autocad, and therefore, need a lot of help getting it to do what i want it to do. Creative programs like cad or anything adobe are great for allowing a person to express their ideas on the computer. However, you have to know how to use the program to get it to show you what you want it to show. Sites like this are great for giving that initial overview that gets a person going on the creative journey. I just looked around the site, and it looks awesome.
um, THANK YOU!
It is always nice when manufacturers put free training information out in public. First, you know the information is credible and is a valid resource when you are stuck on a project. second it is even better when they have a group of "experts" on the site to help people with their questions and issues with the software. I would buy a more expensive software application if I knew the support base behind it is strong and the community of users is there to help people in need.
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