Commentary based on initial technical feedback
August 15, 2011 Leave a comment
Other posts: technical advice so far, and statement of the original problem
Why is it so difficult to work with CAD data with free software? Fundamentally, because DWG is a proprietary format with an interesting history. The proprietary format helps Autodesk to maintain control of its business, its effective monopoly of the computer-aided design market. In twentieth-century thinking, it makes complete business sense for Autodesk to keep control of its format, because effective competition would threaten its business. In a networked world, this has some unfortunate unintended consequences.
Control of the DWG format creates lots of extra business, not only for Autodesk but for other companies. Selling support, setting up databases, selling complex and specialised systems to help people design and manage and plan changes to the built environment. All of this takes up time, takes up resources, and in this case, takes up public funding.
I’m writing this blog because I’d like to work on a simple web-based map application that could help the users of buildings at the University to be more aware of their impact on their environment; how much energy is being used, how much space is being occupied, what impact small changes may turn out to have. Energy and space use are factored into research funding. It costs people more to do their research if they are using energy or space inefficiently, because they have to ask for more “overheads” when they apply for funding. We get more buck for less bang, as our American friends might put it.
This started as a work project; it has now spilled over into free time. I’d like to create a proof-of-concept prototype that can illustrate the benefits, so I can find some more financial support to carry on working on this. There is the potential to save quite a lot of money. Yet i’m stalled at the beginning, due to the difficulty of working with a proprietary format with free and open source software.