|
AECbytes Newsletter #25
(January 16, 2006) Macworld 2006
The start of the New Year is usually an
exciting time for Mac lovers, as it kicks
off with the annual Macworld show in San
Francisco, and both speculation and anticipation
are very rife about what Apple
will announce at the show. The last few
years have been very successful for Apple,
in large part due to the tremendous success
of its iPod music players, and more recently
the iPod video players. Considering that
the Mac platform has continued to remain,
for the most part, a niche player in the
personal computer market, there is always
the possibility that Apple will eventually
divert its focus and energies away from
the Mac and towards its iPod business, a
scenario Mac users must be dreading. So
did Macworld 2006, held last week from January
10 to 13, allay these fears and reassure
Mac users of Apple's commitment to their
beloved platform? Or did it indeed give
them some cause for concern? Read this article
to find out.
To compare notes with previous Macworld
shows, see AECbytes
Newsletter #17 and AECbytes
Newsletter #4.
What's New from Apple?
"What's an Intel chip doing in
a Mac? A whole lot more than it's ever done
in a PC."
This was Apple's provocative slogan for
Macworld this year, posted all over the
conference venue and forming the mainstay
of Steve Job's keynote presentation. It
comes from Apple's recent partnership with
Intel, which was only announced last summer
but has already resulted in two new Macs
that were unveiled at Macworld. The first
is a new iMac featuring Mac OS X running
on the new Intel Core Duo processor, delivering
performance that is up to twice that of
its predecessor. The second is a new MacBook
Pro notebook computer, also featuring the
new Intel Core Duo processor, which delivers
up to four times the performance of the
PowerBook G4, the product it replaces. Both
computers also feature a built-in iSight
video camera for video conferencing out-of-the-box,
and a new media experience using the Apple
Remote with the Front Row application that
turns the computer into a portable theatre,
allowing users to enjoy their content from
across the room. Also exceptional about
the MacBook Pro is that it comes in an aluminum
enclosure that is just one inch thin and
weighs only 5.6 pounds.
On the software front, Apple showed new
releases of iLife, its integrated suite
of digital lifestyle applications, and iWork,
geared towards easily creating professional
looking documents and presentations. iLife
06 features new and improved versions of
iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iDVD, and GarageBand,
that collectively allow you to organize,
edit, and share digital photos, create digital
movies and DVDs, and purchase, manage, and
create digital music and podcasts. In addition,
iLife 06 introduces a new application called
iWeb, designed to let users quickly and
easily create professional-looking web pages,
online photo albums, blogs and Podcasts
(see Figure 1). It includes numerous Apple-designed
templates to help create attractive websites
and a media browser for dragging and dropping
photos, movies, music or playlists, all
without knowing HTML. The content created
with iWeb can be published to Apple's online
.Mac service with one click.

Figure 1. A screen shot
of the new Web design application, iWeb.
(Courtesy: Apple)
iWork 06 features many enhancements to
Pages (which combines traditional word processing
and desktop publishing functionality in
one stylish and easy-to-use interface for
creating letters, newsletters, reports,
brochures, etc., as shown in Figure 2) and
Keynote (which is used to create cinematic-looking
presentations, portfolios, interactive slideshows,
and storyboards). These include tables with
spreadsheet-like calculations that can be
inserted within any document or presentation
giving users the ability to add, multiply
or average numbers in rows or columns; the
ability to create three-dimensional charts
featuring realistic wood grain, metal and
marble textures with full control of the
viewing angle; iPhoto-like advanced image
editing tools for making adjustments to
photos directly within documents and presentations;
the ability to easily create freeform shapes
and curves, including Bézier curves
and shapes with perfectly smooth edges,
and use them to mask images; and the ability
to include reviewer's comments to slides
and documents without affecting the layout.

Figure 2. The new version
of Pages includes several enhancements for
creating and editing content. (Courtesy:
Apple)
Apple had some other iPod-related announcements
that are beyond the scope of this article.
Building Design and Visualization Software
While the announcements made at the keynote
presentation certainly reaffirmed Apple's
commitment to the Macintosh platform, a
tour of the Exhibit Hall presented a slightly
different picture. Much more so than in
previous shows, the Exhibit Hall seemed
to be dominated by gadgets and gizmos, many
of which were various kinds of accessories
for the iPod. The software vendors were
there, of course, but their presence was
somewhat diluted in the midst of all the
gadgets. It is possible that this trend
will continue and be even more pronounced
in the Macworld shows to come.
With regard to AEC-related software, the
prognosis was mixed. Graphisoft, whose ArchiCAD
application is cross-platform, continued
to stay away from the show for the second
successive year, indicating that the Mac
platform is no longer as compelling to its
business. On the other hand, SketchUp was
a big presence at Macworld this year, and
its booth continued to be packed as usual.
Other Macworld regulars, formZ and
VectorWorks, maintained their presence and
used the opportunity to show new versions
of their products. It was heartening to
see two smaller CAD applications, VersaCAD
and TurboCAD, exhibit at the show for the
first time. Last but not the least, Adobe
was one of the biggest exhibitors at the
show, showing its illustration, imaging,
and publishing software along with the recently
acquired Macromedia line of products for
Web design.
autodessys
Inc. gave a sneak preview of the next
release of its modeling, rendering, and
animation application, formZ 6.0,
currently in beta testing and due out later
towards the summer. The biggest new feature
in this release is the introduction of object
animation, which allows objects and lights
to be animated directly in formZ.
The animation can be used for traditional
design visualization or as a way of generating
new 3D forms that cannot be created with
traditional methods. A hierarchical track-based
animation model is used, which allows for
the sharing of common motion parameters
and construction of complex motion scenes.
Tracks are parameters of an entity that
can be animated, allowing control of the
position, rotation, and scale of an object,
light, or camera. In addition to object
animation, formZ 6.0 also features
controlled deformations, where the parameters
of deformations are retained as controlled
objects allowing deformation operations
to be retained in a sequential format and
reordered and edited; support of the ZPR
file format for 3D printing, including full
textures for color printing; a new skinned
loft tool which constructs objects by fitting
a surface through a series of source shapes,
with the optional use of paths and guides
to further define the shape of the object;
a new morph tool that creates new forms
by combining existing objects, and can be
animated with the new animation features
to create dynamic transitions between objects;
and a new transform tool that facilitates
making multiple changes to the position,
rotation, and scale of an object without
needing to change tools. Many of these features,
especially object animation and morphing,
were demonstrated at Macworld in a very
slick animation (see Figure 3) that had
attendees riveted to their seats during
the presentations.

Figure 3. The upcoming
version of formZ featuring object
animation. (Courtesy: autodessys
Inc.)
Nemetschek
North America demonstrated the recent
release, Version 12, of its product family
built on top of the base 2D drafting and
3D modeling application, VectorWorks Fundamentals.
This includes Architect for building design;
Landmark for landscape and site design;
Machine Design for designers, machine shops,
and metal fabricators; Spotlight for entertainment
lighting and scene and set design; Designer,
which combines all of the above into one
comprehensive program for designers who
need it all; and Renderworks, a dedicated
rendering and presentation tool for all
VectorWorks products. The key new features
in version 12 of the VectorWorks family
include a dramatically simplified interface
that provides quicker access to tools; easier
to select object handles for editing; interactive
zoom and pan with the mouse wheel for faster
navigation; an enhanced flyover tool for
manipulating 3D views; the ability to drag
and drop textures on the faces of 3D objects;
improvements in workgroup referencing for
teams to collaborate on different parts
of a design more easily; and support for
3ds files and improved DXF/DWG translation.
In addition, VectorWorks Architect has several
improvements of its own, including new wall
styles and easier creation of component
walls; improved editing and managing of
walls; a new custom stair object that supports
an unlimited number of configurations to
create complex staircases; enhanced door
and window tools with more shapes and options
and double-click editing, a new tool for
dynamically reshaping 3D roofs; new roof
accessories such as attics, soffits, and
fascia; and several new object libraries
including the KnollStudio collection of
classic modern furniture that can be dragged
and dropped into a scene.
While there was no new release of SketchUp
on display at Macworld (version 5.0 was
released last August and was reviewed
in AECbytes shortly afterwards), the big
draw at the SketchUp booth was the debut
of the SketchUp Google Earth plug-in for
the Mac OS X. Recall from my article
on the first SketchUp user conference in
October, where the Google Earth plug-in
for the Windows platform was unveiled, that
this new capability allows site data from
Google Earth to be brought into SketchUp,
with the correct terrain heights and geo-referencing
information. The design can then be conceptualized
in SketchUp in the context of the actual
site. And finally, when the design is complete,
the SketchUp model can be exported back
into Google Earth as a KMZ (compressed XML)
file with the correct geo-referencing information,
so that it can be viewed on the actual site
by anyone using Google Earth who has access
to that file. Now this capability is available
on the Macintosh platform as well (see Figure
4). In fact, Google itself announced the
release of the Google Earth application
for Mac OS X at the Macworld show, so the
SketchUp team had to work hard to ensure
that the SketchUp plugin would be available
at the same time.

Figure 4. A sample SketchUp model
of the Taj Mahal, shown in the SketchUp
window on the left and in the Google Earth
interface on the right. (Courtesy: @Last
Software)
While I hadn't seen VersaCAD
at Macworld prior to this year's show, I
did see it at last year's Technology for
Construction show, and described it briefly
in my article
capturing the highlights of the exhibit
floor. VersaCAD is a cross-platform design
and drafting application used across a range
of disciplines such as architecture, interior
design, facilities planning, plant design,
mechanical design, and so on. Special features
include an easy-to-use interface with minimum
keystroke and mouse clicks required to perform
an operation, parametric doors and windows,
automatic cleanup of multi-line corners
and joints, automatic cut-in of door and
window symbols into walls, and real time
coordinate dial for key-less entry of distances
and coordinates (see Figure 5). The big
news from VersaCAD at Macworld was the announcement
that the upcoming release, VersaCAD 2006
for Macintosh, would be fully compatible
with the new double core Intel-based Macs.
This was achieved by recompiling the application
for the Intel based Macs, shortly after
Apple announced its partnership with Intel.
The doubling of speed provided by the Intel
processors would be directly usable in CAD
software and would translate to user productivity.

Figure 5.
VersaCAD will be of the first CAD applications
to run on the new double core Intel-based
Macs. (Courtesy: Archway Systems, Inc.)
One product making its Mac debut at Macworld
this year was TurboCAD.
This is available in two versions, one for
drafting only and the other for 3D modeling
in addition to drafting. TurboCAD 2D is
an inexpensive yet fairly comprehensive
drafting application that features over
275 design tools and 8,000 symbols and is
compatible with AutoCAD and Adobe Illustrator.
It also include advanced features such as
the ability to create 2D line drawings from
a 3D model created in the modeling version
of TurboCAD, and the ability to automatically
generate a Bill of Materials from the attributes
assigned to each object in the drawing.
TurboCAD 3D includes all the features of
the 2D version and additionally includes
modeling tools for creating curves, surfaces,
and solids. Its modeling repertoire includes
17 different surface types and 9 different
3D primitives, and it includes state of
the art modeling operations such as Booleans,
extrude, sweep, lathe, and loft.
Adobe had a very wide array of applications
to showcase at Macworld, including its recently
acquired Macromedia suite. The focus was
on all the imaging and visualization applications,
and apart from a few scheduled presentations,
I didn't see much of Acrobat being shown,
in contrast to a show like the AIA where
Adobe almost exclusively focused on Acrobat
and PDF (see AECbytes
Newsletter #22 on the AIA 2005 Convention
and Expo). Adobe, however, did have a new
product to unveil at Macworld: Lightroom
Beta for the Mac OS X, a digital imaging
solution for professional photographers
that is available as a free online download
from the Adobe
Labs website. It features a modular,
task-based and streamlined environment,
with the goal of delivering a complete photography
workflow (see Figure 6). It has an interface
specifically designed to put the focus back
on the main object of photographythe
image. With one click, the control panels
and tools fade into the background in Lights-Out
mode, allowing the image to take center
stage. Users also can rapidly scroll through
hundreds of images and a quick one-to-one
zoom allows instant magnification of the
finer points within the image. This could
be a useful application for architectural
firms that take a lot of site and building
photographs.

Figure 6.
Adobe's new application for professional
photography, Lightroom Beta. (Courtesy:
Adobe)
Conclusions
It is terrific to see Apple's partnership
with Intel, which is ushering in a whole
new generation of much more powerful Macintosh
computers. This partnership could well serve
as the tipping point which would make Apple
capture a larger share of the personal computer
market than the marginal 5% or so it has
had for several years now. At the same time,
the huge success of its iPod product is
like a double-edged sword. It has boosted
the fortunes of the company which can give
it more resources to continue to develop
the Macintosh and forge critical partnerships
such as the recent one with Intel. Alternately,
it can be so successful that the company
finds it far more lucrative to simply concentrate
on iPods and similar gadgets rather than
keep up the struggle to retain and grow
the market share of the Macintosh. The Macworld
shows over the next few years should let
us know whether the Mac will be boosted
by the iPod's success or will be swallowed
up by it. If the latter happens, it would
be a real tragedy because both Apple's computers
and the software it develops are far superior
to comparable products and applications
developed by any other company today.
About the Author
Lachmi Khemlani is founder and editor of AECbytes.
She has a Ph.D. in Architecture from UC
Berkeley, specializing in intelligent building
modeling, and consults
and writes on AEC technology. She
can be reached at lachmi@aecbytes.com.
If you found this article useful and have not yet subscribed to AECbytes, please consider doing so. Subscription is free, and more subscribers will allow this publication to provide more of such content to you.
Newsletters
> Issue #25 > Printer-friendly
format
|