More news and updates related to Revit 2024 and some little titbits on AI and literature:
To get a quick overview of what's new in the Revit 2024 product, you can check out the news reel:
To find out where it is going from here forward, explore the updated Autodesk AEC Public Roadmaps and take the opportunity to contribute your own requirements and ideas.
I was asked once again about Revit API training:
Question: Do you teach or have you ever taught Revit in an online mode? I could use that.
Answer: We used to teach face-to-face courses before concentrating harder on making all material publicly available to larger audiences world-wide. Now, the material we used back then has been published and maintained on GitHub:
I never did online courses myself. I know Harry Mattison did, though.
We already have two RevitLookup updates to share, 2024.0.1 and 2024.0.2:
Breaking changes:
Improvements:
Bugs:
Other:
Many thanks to Roman Nice3point for his tremendous work maintaining and improving RevitLookup!
In spite of its name, OpenAI is not open.
Hence, this is exciting, welcome and positive news for the open community:
Coming up soon is a webinar on how to build your own large language model like Dolly detailing how to fine-tune and deploy your custom LLM.
To experience some helpful AI in action yourself, you can check out 12 secret websites powered by AI to finish hours of work in minutes.
I discovered a new author and a new favourite book, Walkaway by Cory Doctorow.
For me, it is a brilliant philosophical scifi reminiscent of William Gibson's Agency that I was so thrilled by in 2021.
It is also focused on community, cooperation, communication, appreciation, relationships, exploitation, rich exploiters fighting to maintain a world of inequality, walkaways proving that we live in a world of surplus, not shortage, realising a post-scarcity gift economy, on-site fabrication of everything you need, and finally moving towards real visionary scifi ideas like eternal life using digital simulations of the human mind.
It also taught me some new vocabulary, such as pwn, as in owned and pwned. That in turn led me to discover leet and leetspeak translators. Not awfully useful in everyday life, but cool stuff to be aware of.