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    What flavor of linux to replace windows?

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    • M
      marcinozga @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller I work with engineers, and they deal with engineers from GE, UTC, NASA, Rolls Royce, Catepillar, you get the picture. And they exchange files constantly. There are only a handful of CAD systems they use. 2 biggest players are Siemens NX and CATIA. 2nd tier is where Autodesk, Solidoworks, ArchiCAD, Solid Edge and Creo falls into. We've also run into MicroStation, but that's a rarity. The rest are a novelty at best, and most engineers wouldn't touch it with a stick.

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @marcinozga
        last edited by

        @marcinozga said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

        @scottalanmiller I work with engineers, and they deal with engineers from GE, UTC, NASA, Rolls Royce, Catepillar, you get the picture. And they exchange files constantly. There are only a handful of CAD systems they use. 2 biggest players are Siemens NX and CATIA. 2nd tier is where Autodesk, Solidoworks, ArchiCAD, Solid Edge and Creo falls into. We've also run into MicroStation, but that's a rarity. The rest are a novelty at best, and most engineers wouldn't touch it with a stick.

        CATIA is on Linux 🙂

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        • M
          marcinozga
          last edited by marcinozga

          That must be a new addition. CATIA was available on commercial Unix systems before, but not on Linux. Siemens NX was and still is available for Linux, but it's no longer maintained and all support will discontinue in 2019.

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          • FATeknollogeeF
            FATeknollogee
            last edited by

            If you play in the CADCAM world of Autodesk Fusion 360 &/or Solidworks...Windows is your only option.
            Fusion 360 does run on Mac.

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            • DonahueD
              Donahue
              last edited by

              wow, thanks for all the replies guys, this was unexpected.

              As far as the ERP, I don't know specifically what part of the application makes it dependent on windows, and honestly, I doubt the software company does either. But, I don't see this particular ERP as being a long term solution for us.

              For CAD, one thing that was mentioned and is very true, is that we constantly have to share CAD files with customers, and they are all using either Autocad or Solidworks. While those files dont have to be the native files, there are some more agnostic file types, it does make is simpler if we use the same applications as our customers. However, with that being said, I can easily see something like cloud versions being more common place in the next 5 years. We may not be able to replace the legacy way to do it now, but that will eventually change.

              As for Draftsight, its terrible. We have it and it will not really even open any drawings we currently make. This is true of most cheap CAD software. We don't even us most of the crazy features of Autocad (or Solidworks), the feature that draftsight is missing has been in autocad for like 20+ years.

              scottalanmillerS B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Donahue
                last edited by

                @Donahue said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                As far as the ERP, I don't know specifically what part of the application makes it dependent on windows, and honestly, I doubt the software company does either. But, I don't see this particular ERP as being a long term solution for us.

                I would guess all of it. It's almost certainly written in 1990s era Windows desktop code.

                F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • B
                  bnrstnr @Donahue
                  last edited by

                  @Donahue said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                  For CAD, one thing that was mentioned and is very true, is that we constantly have to share CAD files with customers, and they are all using either Autocad or Solidworks. While those files dont have to be the native files, there are some more agnostic file types, it does make is simpler if we use the same applications as our customers. However, with that being said, I can easily see something like cloud versions being more common place in the next 5 years. We may not be able to replace the legacy way to do it now, but that will eventually change.

                  We use TransMagic and it is an absolute beast. Amazing software. We use SolidEdge and have to translate CATIA occasionally and a TON of STEP files. But, again, it's Windows only.

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                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                    @flaxking said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                    What are the ERP application's dependencies?

                    .Net requires a Windows licence, but I believe Mono is supposed to be able to replace .Net 4.5 with feature parity

                    .NET not only doesn't require Windows, it's officially platform agnostic. Mono is basically dead because Microsoft moved .NET to being universally available. Not that Mono was bad, it was just never as good as "real" .NET. But now that both .NET and Visual Studio tools for it are available on Linux and MacOS too, there is no call for Mono really (and it will essentially vanish soon.)

                    https://www.microsoft.com/net/learn/dotnet/hello-world-tutorial
                    0_1541004964149_1f9778b4-5ddb-4d49-a602-cd5f93073d59-image.png

                    F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • F
                      flaxking @JaredBusch
                      last edited by

                      @JaredBusch said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                      @scottalanmiller said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                      @flaxking said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                      What are the ERP application's dependencies?

                      .Net requires a Windows licence, but I believe Mono is supposed to be able to replace .Net 4.5 with feature parity

                      .NET not only doesn't require Windows, it's officially platform agnostic. Mono is basically dead because Microsoft moved .NET to being universally available. Not that Mono was bad, it was just never as good as "real" .NET. But now that both .NET and Visual Studio tools for it are available on Linux and MacOS too, there is no call for Mono really (and it will essentially vanish soon.)

                      https://www.microsoft.com/net/learn/dotnet/hello-world-tutorial
                      0_1541004964149_1f9778b4-5ddb-4d49-a602-cd5f93073d59-image.png

                      .Net Core and .Net Full are not the same. You can't try and run a compiled .Net Full app on .Net Core, but you can try to run it on Mono

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                      • F
                        flaxking @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        @scottalanmiller said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                        @Donahue said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                        As far as the ERP, I don't know specifically what part of the application makes it dependent on windows, and honestly, I doubt the software company does either. But, I don't see this particular ERP as being a long term solution for us.

                        I would guess all of it. It's almost certainly written in 1990s era Windows desktop code.

                        If all of it is, then there is a good chance it can run using Wine. Not sure if it would be against the EULA of the runtimes though

                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @flaxking
                          last edited by

                          @flaxking said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                          @scottalanmiller said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                          @Donahue said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                          As far as the ERP, I don't know specifically what part of the application makes it dependent on windows, and honestly, I doubt the software company does either. But, I don't see this particular ERP as being a long term solution for us.

                          I would guess all of it. It's almost certainly written in 1990s era Windows desktop code.

                          If all of it is, then there is a good chance it can run using Wine. Not sure if it would be against the EULA of the runtimes though

                          Would be super unlikely for there to be a EULA requiring Microsoft branded OS libraries. Possible, but crazily unlikely.

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                          • black3dynamiteB
                            black3dynamite
                            last edited by black3dynamite

                            Choosing .NET Core or .NET Framework depends on your need.
                            https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/choosing-core-framework-server

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                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @black3dynamite
                              last edited by

                              @black3dynamite said in What flavor of linux to replace windows?:

                              Choosing .NET Core or .NET Framework depends on your need.
                              https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/choosing-core-framework-server

                              Summary.... .NET Core when you are a competent developer. .NET Framework when you are using legacy crap that you can't get away from.

                              They make it pretty clear which is first class and which is a crippled fallback.

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