SketchUp 2016: Key Themes SketchUp, Connected SketchUp users’ models are often connected to cloud applications, shared with collaborators and clients, reviewed and marked up, and are often rich with information and properties that need to be reported and analyzed. In this release, SketchUp is more connected than ever to the people, applications, and information that interact with a model. Most notably, every SketchUp user now has access to Trimble Connect, a web-based platform for storing, sharing, referencing, reviewing, and collaborating on building projects.
What is Trimble Connect? Trimble Connect is the Trimble Buildings online collaboration platform. Think of it like a private 3D Warehouse, just for building project assets. Upload SKP’s, DWG’s, DXF’s, IFC’s PDF’s and share with team members. Trimble Connect is built off the GTeam platform, meaning that it enables sharing, reviewing and commenting in a web browser.
In the SketchUp 2016 launch, we’re providing an integration that links your SketchUp models to Trimble Connect. SketchUp users can find Trimble Connect in the extensions menu and access the following functionality:
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Sign-up for and sign-in to a Trimble Connect account Publish, download, and update SketchUp models hosted on Trimble Connect. Access and update reference models from Trimble Connect (which is kind of like importing a component model, then reloading it.)
Trimble Connect is rolling out across the entire Trimble Buildings portfolio of products. That means that SketchUp, Tekla, Vico, MEP customers can all upload and pull-down projects from Trimble Connect. From our point of view, this is the first time that design-build stakeholders have had a shared workspace.
Users will sign-up for Trimble Connect by creating a Trimble account. Trimble Connect starts with a free trial that gives you one project workspace to tinker with. From there, customers can purchase Trimble Connect via connect.trimble.com .
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