Additional revenue is always positive for a companies bottom line even if it isn't earth shaking. A hobbyist tier with a more hobbyist focused price point wouldn't be a cash cow for Autodesk but it would certainly make the hobby users happy with a more consumer grade product. Is the addition of that one feature worth $500 a year to a hobbyist who does not generate revenue with Fusion? Not even close, nor will it ever be. The only new feature thats been added with the current updates that would make the hobbyist license I have better is the prismatic method for converting meshs to solid bodies. I use it primarily for small costume prop design, altering STLs downloaded from sites like Thingiverse and remixing miniatures for tabletop wargaming. The old licensing turned regular people to Fusion for specific hobby tasks that they were brute forcing with programs like meshmixer, tasks that will never require any of the fabrication features of Fusion but are made easier with Fusion. The OPs question is a valid one here and one I hear pretty frequently in my circles. Autodesk Fusion 360 manages more than 100 file formats. So, In a single cloud-based platform that works on both Mac and PC. It manages your whole product making process. The markup, comment, and collaborate on your program anytime, anywhere. The old hobbyist/startup license was a luxury and one anyone with common sense realized would eventually go away whenever a large company starts hammering bottom line. With the Autodesk Fusion 360 keygen app, you can view it.
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