Getting ready to present an overview of Forge and talk about connecting the desktop and the cloud at the RTC Revit Technology Conference Europe and the ISEPBIM Forge and BIM workshops at ISEP, the Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto, Jim Quanci very kindly supplied an updated list of really cool demo sites, plus a word of warning:
Here are a number of links to various Forge demos that I can use myself and point others to play with in the coming days:
Note that several of these sites were built by independent partners on their own, just as little sample snippets in blog posts. Many thanks to Jim for maintaining and sharing this list!
All Forge sample application code is provided on GitHub, most of it in the Developer-Autodesk and the new streamlined Autodesk-Forge collections.
It includes several of the demos listed above.
Jim adds a word of warning about my samples connecting desktop and cloud that I fully agree with:
One warning... watching your blog posts where folks might be led to believe using a browser experience to edit a Revit model is a good thing… it’s not clear to me it is.
I fully agree with this warning!
If anyone is interested in serious web based interaction with RVT files, they should read about our thoughts on Revit I/O and get in touch to discuss their needs with us.
Since this question comes up at all, I should probably be clearer about my intentions:
In the presentation, I underline that the advantage lies in leveraging the data, and sharing the absolute minimum of information required to complete a streamlined workflow in an optimal manner.
There is no doubt whatsoever that actual editing of a BIM model is light years out of scope.
I just want to point out that tiny little snippets of data can be passed around and used to drive a really efficient globally connected process.