hahn rossman
2001-Mar-21 18:31 UTC
AutoCAD 14 with wine... anyone have any luck with this?
It looks bad from the (possibly outdated) list on the winehq web site. I am also extremely interested in running r14 on Wine or possibly some other emulator. Any suggestions other than WINE??? Hahn Rossman Alki Foundry The Spectre wrote:> > All my CAD software is windows based, i would like to try it in Linux, > but from my initial research it doesn't look good. > > I have also looked for Microstation 95 (for linux) with no luck. I > would like to be able to use these particular programs as they are the > "standard" in my business. > > Anyone have any suggestions? > > Spectre
Tomas Nykung
2001-Mar-22 03:10 UTC
AutoCAD 14 with wine... anyone have any luck with this?
"hahn rossman" wrote...> It looks bad from the (possibly outdated) list on the winehq web site. I > am also extremely interested in running r14 on Wine or possibly some > other emulator. Any suggestions other than WINE??? > Hahn Rossman > Alki FoundryI am repeating myself here now, as this question is asked every now and then, and i'm the one that usually seems to answer it, so this is mostly an copy and paste from another thread about the same subject, with some additions. This is also OT in this newsgroop, as it has nothing to do with Wine, so Wine folks please ignore... I got AutoCAD (LT) 2000 up and running under Linux with Win4Lin. You may want to try it "in the meantime", until Wine is ready for AutoCAD. You may download an evaluation version directly from: www.netraverse.com The only problem i have had with it so far is that the scroll wheel on my mouse is not supported, and thus you cannot zoom with the scroll wheel in AutoCAD under Win4Lin. (If you use AutoCAD R14 then this don't make any sense, because the scroll wheel isn't supported in R14.) You can of course zoom "the old way" and everything else like printing/plotting is working fine as far as i have tested. I posted a question about the scroll wheel problem to the Win4Lin support folks, and got a very polite and good answer (definitly not an auto reply) stating that they are working on it, so maybe it will be supported under future versions. The drawback with Win4Lin, as i se it, is that it requires a Windows 9x CD as it needs many of the files from the Windows CD to run, and thus you still need a Windows licence. I think Wine is the only emulator that can run Windows programs under Linux without any Windows code and license, the others tries, to various degrees, to run Windows under Linux, and then run the Windows programs under that. (Correct me if i'm wrong.) (But hey, it's a cool feeling to boot Windows under Linux :)) With Win4Lin you can run Windows in an normal window directly as a normal X program, or then you can run it on another virtual console and switch between the X desktop and the Windows desktop by pressing Ctrl+Alt+F7 and Ctrl+Alt+F8. There are also other alternatives, for example VMware, but that costs much more, and need more system resources to run, as it runs the whole Windows thingy under an "virtual computer" and therefore needs to load every kind of Windows stuff to run, unlike Win4Lin that somehow uses Linux as the OS and run Windows as an application under Linux. (Eh, you shouldn't try to explain to others what you don't fully understand yourself, especially not in your third language... <g>). There is also a free implemention of VMware named Plex86 http://www.plex86.org/ but that is still beta (alpha?) and used at your own risk :), but it's rapidly developed, and may be worth a look. Regards Tomas Nykung