|
Tech. Books
Software
PC & Laptops
Electronics
|
|
|
|
| IMSI FloorPlan 3D Home Design Suite Version 10 | 
enlarge | From: IMSI Category: Software
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $9.90 You Save: $30.09 (75%)
New (3) Used (1) from $9.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 2926
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Nt 4, Windows 98, Windows Xp, Windows 2000 Media: CD-ROM Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 8 x 2.4
MPN: 00-fp35-10dc Model: 10014 UPC: 411378016492 EAN: 0730526355895 ASIN: B0009XB14C
Release Date: June 10, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW SEALED, FASTEST SHIPPER
|
| Features:
| • | Tools for customizing, visualizing, and planning home-design projects | | • | Over 1,000 customizable home plans; online 3-D kitchen showroom | | • | 1900 pre-drawn 3-D symbols; design and edit in 2-D and 3-D | | • | New LightWorks 7.4 photo-realistic 3-D rendering technology | | • | New QuickTime Viewer to take virtual tour of design in 3-D |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description FloorPlan 3D Design Suite 10 is a superior collection of tools for customizing, visualizing, and planning entire home-design projects -- from concept to completion. Work with over 1,000 customizable home plans, online 3D kitchen showroom & 1900 pre-drawn 3D symbols. It's also got an option to design and edit in 2D and 3D. View your design in stunning realism with gorgeous, realistic 3D walkthrough.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Not for the regular Joe Home Owner August 30, 2008 Might be a good product, but too hard to use for the regular Joe Home Owner.
Should come with a bottle of Tylenol August 5, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you enjoy suffering this is the home design software for you. You can get it to produce something eventually, but you will put in hours trying to get the software to do what you want and have to give up on getting it do other things it says it does. I initially purchased Version 9 and nearly tore my hair out trying to do layout for a house remodeling we were working on. I'm in the computer business so I'm used to battling with bad software to get it to work and wasn't going to let this package get the best of me. I did finally get some useful floorplans out of it. The 3D modeling was helpful although certainly not as good as they say it is. When an upgrade offer for Version 10 came in the mail I thought to myself, OK, maybe this will fix some/all the bugs (yeah, right!). On the contrary, it was essentially the same package, nothing changed except that it was worse. Now I couldn't get it to print floorplans with dimensions. After the upgrade joke, I'm certainly never giving IMSI another penny. I recently pulled the software off the shelf and reinstalled to work on another project. It was a bad dream coming back, after about 10 minutes I remembered what a nightmare this software is and said "Never again!" It is now shelfware destined soon to be given to some poor soul on freecycle. I guess to be realistic, if you want GOOD floorplan design software you'll have to spend many hundreds of dollars, not tens.
Great if you have previous experience... May 10, 2008 Not as user friendly as say the Better Homes and Garden home designer, but it does convert to CAD. Takes a lot of patience that I didn't have.
Don't buy if you have used anything more expensive January 12, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I used this "suite" to attempt to design houses for a Habitat for Humanity affiliate. If all you are looking for is a pretty "flyover" of an unrefined house design, this might work. As far as creating a working drawing with enough detail to build off of, this is not the program.
My biggest problem with the software is that you have to export the drawing from FloorPlan to an included CAD program (TurboCAD) and then mark it up with dimensions, etc. If you want to move a window 3 inches, you have to go back into FloorPlan and move it, and re-import and start all over again with dimensioning.
I was probably expecting too much for a cheaper CAD program but this one isn't even worth the effort. Any advantage over old school hand drafting was nearly non-existent from my experience.
IMSI FloorPlan 3D Advantage over Punch Architect 4000 January 3, 2007 43 out of 43 found this review helpful
I own both the IMSI (FloorPlan 3D Version 5) and Punch (Architect 4000) software titles, and the following are my own conclusions. I have no vested interest in either manufacturer. I have a doctorate in Mechanical Engineering, and have taught interactive computer graphics, so I guess I am more than usually familiar with computers and design.
I designed my previous home using the IMSI package, and after using it to capture the design, I passed it along to a draftsman to create drawings for the permitting process. I found that the package was easy to use (although a bit weird), and that it generally worked great. When we moved in, the home was absolutely spectacular! So, when we moved to another state to retire, we decided to repeat the process. Even though I still had the IMSI software (Version 5) and it readily installed onto XP, I thought that surely there had been improvements. So, I took the time to find the "best package out there". The reviews I read said that the Punch (Architect 4000) package was rated best, had the most features, blah, blah, blah. So I bought it, in spite of paying approximately 3X what I would pay for the latest IMSI version of FloorPlan 3D. The manual is about an inch thick, but I started wading through, thinking that this was the learning cost of a really good package. The manual seemed reasonable and there are TONS of features (read complexity), but when I actually tried to use the program, I couldn't get anything done. Everything was hard to do. Then, and this was the killer for me, whenever I saved data, I could never read the file back in. I tried everything, and eventually thought that it was my fault, so I went back to my old IMSI package because I had a house to design.
I quickly got up to speed because IMSI wins out hands down for its simple user interface. I struggled with both initially, but soon found that IMSI's wall layout tool, while weird, was useable. It's ease of use (tailorable wall heights, pushing even non-rectilinear wall segments around, changing wall thicknesses, immediate demonstration of dimensions and room square footage, changing wall and floor materials, colors, and texture, etc) allowed one to work pretty quickly. I was never able to use Punch's layout editor efficiently. Ever! Forget saving the data so you could work on a design again. Even just creating a simple layout was a huge struggle. Unless you knew the design beforehand, it was very difficult to lay out a floor plan interactively. This was what IMSI was good at. Even with a fully designed floorplan, I had trouble with the Punch program.
IMSI was also the easiest in viewing your design in 3D. Again, the viewing tools were weird and somewhat non-intuitive, but eventually useful. Punch's 3D viewer was totally useless, and I was never able to control the views, no matter what I did. And, "Hey!", I taught computer graphics.
After spending many hours getting a complete design (from my working with IMSI) entered into a freshly-reloaded Punch, I again tried to save my work. When I went back to work on it some more, it was unreadable. The file was there, but there was some formatting error that made it unreadable. I was furious, but thankfully, I had the IMSI design captured. So, I had a decision- Waste more time trying to debug a program I had paid 3X more for than the IMSI FloorPlan 3D, or spend my time getting work done on my house plan. Actually, I downloaded a free upgrade to Version 5.1 and got busy. Now I am thinking of purchasing IMSI's Version 11 as I am finalizing our house plan and like some of the new features and abilities of the new software.
To be candid, neither software package was bug-free. IMSI occasionally doesn't allow you to move a wall, but that is almost always because there is some constraint that is disallowing the modification. I found Punch to be even more restrictive. While I was able to export the IMSI design as a vrml file and e-MAIL it to my son to review, Punch had the greatest number of export file options. Too bad it always lost my saved designs. Neither package really creates beautiful 3D graphics, but IMSI's simple renderings were adequate for previewing the design work. I also liked IMSI's design methods using internal room dimensions. But, neither program made it clear how to proceed in starting a design from scratch. Nowhere did they tell you whether you could design the 2nd floor first, whether you had to layout the foundation beforehand (Punch), etc.
Finally, I should mention that I wanted to input site information for my lot, but that was too costly in terms of time. Interestingly, I downloaded Google's free Sketchup software, imported my IMSI design (in dxf file format), and was able to place it on the terrain using a Sketchup to Google Earth tool, and then interactively view it in 3D on my 10 acre lot using Google Earth. I found out that I have some serious grading and fill work to do on the build site.
|
|
|
| |