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| Resilient.
Lazear debuts Versa CAD for OS X. (Photo by Tom Sawyer
for ENR) |
The developers of
some early CAD software for Macintosh, DOS and UNIX machines
are proving, once again, that you cant keep good ideas
down. Their products have been sold, shuffled, reconstituted
and reacquired a few times since 1987. Now, they are back
in the market with a new CAD program for Mac OS X.
VersaCAD 2005 is scheduled to start
shipping Feb. 15. It is marketed by Archway Systems Inc.,
a company founded in 1989 by Tom and Mike Lazear when they
reacquired VersaCAD. They had originally developed the product,
but sold it two years before.
VersaCAD has continued to carry
a Windows and Mac customer base of about 20,000 seats through
it all, says Tom Lazear, CEO of the Huntington Beach, Calif.-based
firm. The new product, however, is "closer to a rewrite"
with some major re-engineering. "Its really UNIX
with a smiley face on it," he says. But it is also backward
compatible to the very earliest Apple operating systems, he
adds.
The software package includes
VersaCAD that "will run on any Macintosh ever built,"
Lazear says, but includes the new release designed to run
on OS 10.3 or higher. Price, versatility and ease of use are
big selling points, he claims. The software sells for $629
for a single seat, with the usual breaks for site licenses.
It uses Mac-style menus and tool bars and graphical interface
and has sets of standard symbol libraries for setting up architectural,
mechanical, electrical, mapping and plant design projects.
It has a translator for importing CAD files from other products,
including AutoCAD.
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