Great work from @GregorVilkner: https://t.co/J27wALe2kz A post on @jeremytammik's blog! I'm very jealous😅. #GraphQL is set to bring some big wins for the #AEC industry.
Big thanks to everyone who submitted a proposal for AU 2020!
Now it’s time cast your ballot! Vote for the classes YOU want to see at AU. Ends July 13! https://t.co/5KMvrRfQhv
@dayle_design @EdGreen02630807 @WeWork This is phenomenal... the Holy Grail of early stage MEP design... I’d love to ask questions about the tech stack behind this and the algorithms used but I guess that would be telling ;)
The steps:
- Push Revit model to neo4j
- Store distance from centre of space to each door
- Store distance between each opening in each space
- Shortest path (distance as weight) can then be found between spaces
I’ll push the Dynamo Neo4j nodes to the building graph repo shortly
This is something I've been thinking about for a while: using space bounding info to find shortest travel paths between doors/open boundaries. Video below shows steps (quickly) to achieve this for Revit model once pushed to #neo4j with #buildinggraph, and some Dynamo nodes.
@NatGMac@data_shapes Came here to say pretty much what everyone else has said: the learning curve is worth it, use the mvvm pattern, and avoid code behind as much as possible.
@_johnegan Well done @_johnegan@bimlauncher Great interview with @CarolTallon on @iPropertyRadio
https://t.co/HsZbW4suMG
Excellent point - #AEC companies must stop using valuable "Human Resources" as a proxy for manual exchanging of data between systems - machines can do those tasks
Hi. Today, I am livestreaming development of an integration between Sharepoint & @AutodeskForge viewer so 3D files from sharepoint can be viewed in the Forge viewer. If you would like to follow along heres the link~> https://t.co/X6ntw51Yvn via @YouTube