Are you interested in reading or writing DWG files directly, without installing AutoCAD?
Querying? Viewing? Editing?
Would you like to expand your solutions to support mobile devices and the web?
Would you like to avoid implementing different or new application code to support desktop, mobile and web apps?
Hear about the most efficient, reliable and robust solutions at the upcoming 'I Love DWG' meetup in Prague next Tuesday evening, September 8.
Maybe you are already familiar with the Autodesk RealDWG library for reading and writing DWG files.
Are you also aware of the new AutoCAD I/O web service?
It provides access to AutoCAD on the Cloud with much of the power and capability of a full desktop AutoCAD installation, tuned for web development.
Do you know about the Autodesk View & Data web service that can help you deliver a customised viewing experience on any device in just a few hours of development time?
The View & Data web service provides a broad and deep API and supports over 60 3D and 40 2D file formats, most of them non-Autodesk.
RealDWG, AutoCAD I/O and the translation engine driving the Autodesk View & Data web service are all created from the same codebase, too.
Adam Nagy and Kean Walmsley will be demonstrating a number of sample applications based on the AutoCAD I/O and View & Data web services.
You’ll get to see how sites such as Kean's http://jigsawify.com – based on AutoCAD I/O – and http://vrok.it – using the View & Data API – are implemented.
Would you like to learn more?
Please join us at the meetup next Tuesday evening, September 8th, from 6-9 pm at the Autodesk office in Prague, just a ten-minute drive from the Diplomat Hotel.
Beer and snacks are provided. And if you want to talk for longer, we’ll take you to dinner too! :-)
Questions?
Please do reach out!
You can contact both Adam and Kean directly by email.
Also, if the timing of the meetup doesn’t work for you, please let us know: we have more time to chat during the afternoon of the 8th and the morning of the 9th.
I am hope you can make it! :-)
Let a sad-looking robot melt your heart and ponder friendship, cooperation and greed in Jack Anderson's nine-minute short film Wire Cutters:
A chance encounter proves fateful for two robots mining on a desolate planet