![]() You may want to check our Youtube playlist down the page for some tutorials in getting your first cloud model published with Revit (it’s very easy!). Hopefully, this can give you perspective if your firm is thinking about moving to the cloud. I’m taking the highlights from our chat and providing context with links to relevant content. I asked Sasha to pick out the basics: show us how to get started in moving a Revit project from a server environment to the cloud, and then to describe how Revit synchs with BIM 360, and what this will open up in terms of sharing work across disciplines, offices, and time zones. Connect is about extending BIM collaboration across all phases of a project, through the right mix of AEC-focused tools and multidisciplinary workflows. For my final post of 2019, I’m digging into “Connect,” an important pillar of the Revit product roadmap. “Teams are no longer necessarily co-located, so it is really important to be able to work effortlessly across the world with people,” says Autodesk senior product manager, Sasha Crotty. Global, multidisciplinary teams coordinate and execute all aspects of a project relying on the real-time exchange of data, with Revit cloud models at the center of better collaboration and tighter integration across all project phases. ![]() ![]() The architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry increasingly runs BIM projects in the cloud. Ask a project architect about keys to successful design development and you may hear about three C’s: coordination, collaboration, and – more recently – “cloud.”
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