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Using new Autodesk workflows for Inventor and Fusion 360 Interoperability

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説明

This session will give an overview of how customers can accomplish parallel design workflows with Inventor software and Fusion 360 software. Using cloud-based interoperability, customers can use Fusion 360 and Inventor together for a variety of parallel ID, CAM, CAE, and supply chain workflows.

主な学習内容

  • Understand how interoperability between Inventor and Fusion 360 works
  • Discover interoperability workflows for CAM workflows between Inventor and Fusion 360
  • See how to use interoperability for CAE workflows between Inventor and Fusion 360
  • Understand some of the Autodesk technology used to enable interoperability workflows between Inventor and Fusion 360

スピーカー

  • Loren Welch さんのアバター
    Loren Welch
    Loren Welch is a Senior Product Manager on the Inventor product line at Autodesk. Loren has diversified experience in multiple CAD/CAM/CAE/PDM software applications and rapid prototyping solutions. Loren has been at Autodesk since 2008 and has had roles including technical account manager, business development, technical sales manager, and product manager. Loren has been a speaker at multiple Autodesk University conferences, as well as many other industry events.
  • Jamie Scherer
    Jamie Scherer is the Manager of the Fusion Customer Adoption Team at Autodesk. Jamie has 15+ years of Industry experience as an Industrial Designer and CAD Manager. Jamie has been a speaker at multiple Autodesk University events as well as other national Industry Events for Autodesk. Jamie has been at Autodesk since 2010 and has worked as a Manufacturing Technical Specialist prior to working in Autodesk Business Strategy and Marketing.
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Transcript

LOREN WELCH: We'll go ahead and do some brief introductions and then kind of hop into the class. But quick show of hands, how many people were in Bankim's class yesterday covering this similar topic? Good. All right. So all fresh faces. Awesome.

So real quick, from introduction standpoint, my name is Loren Welch. I'm a product manager on the Inventor team. And with me we have a Fusion fellows.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: I'm Bankim Charegaonkar. I'm a product manager for Fusion.

JAMIE SCHERER: I'm Jamie Scherer. I manage the Fusion customer adoption team.

LOREN WELCH: So what we really want to go through today is, like, Amy announced yesterday, the AnyCAD relationship between Inventor and Fusion. So obviously, we're going to talk a little bit about how it works, some of the technology that's required, and just how to get it. So before we start, again, on the vein of the last Friday morning, we did notice the first person that entered today. So here you go.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: The most punctual award. Congratulations.

LOREN WELCH: You get some stickers too. There we go. So we do want this to be interactive. If you have questions, we'll try to handle them on the fly as we go. If you ask a question and we might be handling it in a few slides, we'll probably hold off a bit. But let's keep this interactive, keep everybody awake this morning, and get into it. All right?

So-- wow, it went all the way to the last slide.

JAMIE SCHERER: Thanks for coming.

[LAUGHTER]

[APPLAUSE]

LOREN WELCH: We're done, we're don.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: And that's how it works. Any questions?

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. So real quick, like we talked about, what we're going to go through-- again, we did the introductions-- but really just talk about what it is. And we talk about what it is-- some of it is what was AnyCAD that we've had in Inventor for a few years, how have we expanded that with Fusion not only from being able to take in the Fusion design files but also for the Fusion folks to leverage AnyCAD technology on their side to work with right now in Inventor and SOLIDWORKS.

We also want to talk about what technology is required. It's not just Fusion. It's not just inventor. There's a little bit more of the Autodesk family that's brought into this. And we have some of those people in the room on the development team. So we're going to probably defer some of those questions to some other folks. And then, obviously, we'll take a look and we'll show it in action.

Now, before we get started, it's a PowerPoint. I have to have at least one graph. So we've got that taken care of. So with that being said, let's just talk a little bit about what it is, right? So AnyCAD-- how many of you are familiar or have used AnyCAD and Inventor? Very good, very good.

So in 2016, we released the initial version of AnyCAD. And these are the formats that we work with. And what AnyCAD really does is it gives you an associative link to a non-native Inventor file. So if you're reading in a CATIA file, a SOLIDWORKS file, any of the PTC products, it gives you that live link to a non-native file. So from a supply chain perspective, inventor is kind of get top level of aggregate where you can bring in these outside designs. If your vendor or supplier updates that file, it updates like it's a native Inventor file, just with an update or a refresh in Inventor.

So it was quite popular. We had a lot of requests for additional functionality and formats. So the next release with Inventor 2017, we took a look at neutral file formats STEP. So the reason we targeted STEP as a neutral file format, it's by far and away the most used 3D neutral file format. Inventor customers read in over about half a million neutral file formats a month and STEP crushed all of them. So that's obviously where we wanted to focus.

We also, with the 2017 product, added AnyCAD for Inventor. And what that really means is, those that are using 2017, if you're on the .4 release-- I think it's .4.2 now-- you can actually read in 2018 files. So it gives you cross-version support between the different products. So if you have two project teams, long lead time projects, and you're waiting to migrate to the next version, this gives you that buffer where one part or company can move to 2018, the other could stay on 2017, and they could still use the same data until they both move up to 2018.

OK. How many of you guys have tried, that cross-version support? A couple. All right. Good.

With 2018. the .1 release in July, we added Solid Edge support. So now you'll have Solid Edge support with 2018. And then 2018.2, which was actually released last week, now gives you support for Fusion 360. And that's the .fusiondesign file-- that's what we're naming them now? Yeah, all right. .fusiondesign file.

So how many of you were aware that 2018.2 was out last week? Awesome.

JAMIE SCHERER: Nice.

LOREN WELCH: You all have it installed, up and running, good to go? Yeah. How many non-Autodesk people have it installed and running?

JAMIE SCHERER: All right.

LOREN WELCH: So that's really where we're at with AnyCAD. We're definitely not done expanding it. And I think now what we're seeing is AnyCAD is a great mechanism at Autodesk for us to start building bridges between different products and really helping customers with workflows that they've been asking for us to support over long-term and short-term.

So I have one question and another set of headphones here. So when I talk about what is this AnyCAD relationship, we want to be very clear. It is a bridge-- it is a two-way bridge. It is not a one-way street to one or the other. It's an associative link to the topology of both.

When I say it's a bridge, and it's not a one way street, it allows me, if I'm a Fusion 360 user I can take in Inventor part. I have that associative link. I could add new features to it if I need to. So if you're getting a supplier part, but you do custom machining on it, or you modify supplier parts, that's a good example of that.

From the Inventor perspective, if I'm getting files in from Fusion, again, I can do the same thing. I can add Inventor features. If the Fusion file is updated, my downstream features still survive-- within reason. It's just like an Inventor file, right? If you take a cube and turn into a sphere, things are going to break. Still looking at face and edge IDs. So that's what we're talking about.

So here's my-- and it is a pull update. The user that's consuming the file has to request an update. So Inventor will notify me or I can check for an update to see if the Fusion file has a new version, and I pull the update. Same thing on the Fusion side--

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Yeah, same thing on the Fusion side. In Fusion if you have any kind of reference to the Inventor file, it looks like any other extract in Fusion. So as soon as the model changes on the Inventor side, the user in Fusion gets a pop-up notification saying the data has changed, but now it's up to them to click update to really consume those changes.

LOREN WELCH: Yep. So that being said, who knows what this bridge is? And here's my only clue-- it is the largest dual anchor suspension bridge in the Western hemisphere. And if you say Golden Gate, you have to leave the room.

[LAUGHTER]

AUDIENCE: The Bay Bridge?

LOREN WELCH: Nope.

AUDIENCE: Mackinac

LOREN WELCH: There we go, it's Mackinaw, but we'll take it.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

[LAUGHTER]

LOREN WELCH: There we go. Oh, you lost your stickers.

JAMIE SCHERER: I'm impressed.

LOREN WELCH: So if you can't tell, I'm from Michigan. So that makes me very happy. All right.

So who is it for? So we talk about who is this for, it's kind of, who has access to it? Again, in typical Autodesk fashion, we have a lot of matrixed way. You can see products and access through entitlements and things like that.

If you're a Product Design and Manufacturing Collection subscriber, you will have access to this. If you're Product Design Suite Maintenance customer, you'll have access to this. If you're a standalone Fusion 360 customer, you have access to this.

Really, the one entitlement that kind of-- the one ring to rule them all-- is if you have access to Fusion 360 or Fusion Team, you have access to this. Meaning, Jamie, if you're just diffusion 360 subscriber but you invite me as in Inventor standalone-- just an Inventor Pro standalone customer-- to his Fusion Team hub, I would have access to that connector then. You have to have access to the Fusion Team to get this. Is that clear as mud, kind of?

AUDIENCE: So if you have Inventor and you're non-subscription, but you have the whole Manufacturing suite, this is in there. But you have to be linking to somebody with it.

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, if you have a suite or a collection, do you have access? So you have access to it-- you don't need to link it to anybody else to have access to it. What I was saying earlier, if you just have Inventor Professional as a standalone, not as a collection or a suite, you wouldn't get this unless you're invited to a team hub.

AUDIENCE: OK. But if you have the suite, it's there.

LOREN WELCH: Yes. But if you have a suite or collection, you will have access to this, because you have a Fusion Team entitlement. Your administrator is going to have to give all your-- if you're a user and you're not an admin, and your admin hasn't given you a Fusion Team access, then, obviously, you're not going to have this functionality.

AUDIENCE: So he has to give [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. And in the help files, we try to point people to what is needed to do some of this. OK? Question?

AUDIENCE: I'm scratching my head.

LOREN WELCH: Oh, that's fine.

JAMIE SCHERER: Scratching your head is allowed.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: So to add to your thing, if you have the full collection, as part of it, along with in Inventor you also have a Fusion entitlement in there. So in the next Fusion update there is a path directly to create Fusion Team environments directly in tool. So you would entitle yourself to Fusion, launch it, create a team environment right there, and then you can use that to bring your Inventor data that into Fusion or back and forth-- or vice versa.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. And that's a really good point, and I'm sorry I didn't mention that. The reason we list the collection. in the Product Design suite, is those both give you Fusion 360 access. OK?

And with that, I'll give it over Jamie to talk a little bit.

JAMIE SCHERER: All right, so let's talk a little bit about how it works. Wrong way. So Loren kind of mentioned before, and I'll say, it's always easier to see it with little icons in the bottom corner. So simply, in Inventor-- so if we're going Fusion to Inventor, all you have to do is insert the .fusiondesign into Inventor.

And, of course, that's your action, right? If you wanted to translate and bring data into Inventor, you could do that. But if you insert it with AnyCAD, that's how you can consume the update. So as Loren kind of mentioned before, bringing it in and bringing in it as a reference is how you're going to maintain the associativity with the Fusion 360 data.

And in the reverse, going from Inventor into Fusion, all you have to do is insert the IPT into a design, and it's going to maintain that same reference. So it'll look like a distributed design inside of Fusion 360, and then you can consume the updates if they change.

LOREN WELCH: Now, one important thing there is the IPT file has to be Fusion Team.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yes. Exactly right. So what technology is required? We talked about a little bit already. So the tools that you need-- and this is not necessarily what "you" need. It might not be "you" or you and your cubicle mate that are doing this. This might be between you and your supplier. It might be between you and the job shop down the street that's cutting your parts.

But what you need, between the people that are going to collaborate this way, would be Fusion 360. So someone's going to be bringing in the Inventor data or sending Fusion 360 data to Inventor. You need a Fusion Team, which is where you're going to collaborate and share the files back and forth. We need that thing to go away.

You need inventors 2018.2. So Loren mentioned before, I think the 8th was the release date-- brand new update coming from the Inventor team. You need Inventor 2018.2. And you need Autodesk Desktop Connector. If you're using Inventor, that's the tool that's going to connect the Inventor files to the Fusion Team project where someone using Fusion 360 can consume it.

Did I miss anything there? So Desktop Connector, the simple place where you'll find-- it inside of Fusion Team you'll see Loren's pretty face in the corner. If you click on your profile, all the way at the bottom you'll find a new, little add-in, and it'll say Desktop Connector for Fusion. Install it from there. It adds a little utilities-- a little screenshot of it here. Loren can kind of pull it up later when we do some live demoing, but that's the tool. That's the way that you're going to maintain those references between products.

LOREN WELCH: And Michael-- so Michael's on the Desktop Connector team, so we'll throw a lot of questions his way I'm sure. But when was this available in Fusion? So last week, in Fusion team, if you logged in you might have saw it and not known what it was. So that first alert is now gone if you've logged into Fusion Team, but you can find it where Jamie had mentioned.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yep. All right. Let's put this in action.

So to talk a little bit about some of the workflows-- and I think that, hopefully, everyone in the room, your head is kind of already thinking about ways you can use it. One great example might be going from Fusion to Inventor for conceptual design, industrial design. So maybe someone inside of your organization could be starting to take advantage of Fusion, might be creating something in Fusion and bringing it over to Inventor where you're going to continue to work on the engineering requirements.

Another great example would be going from Fusion to Inventor-- are they going to all play? There we go-- for generative design. So, again, hopefully everyone was as inspired as I was sitting through some of the new generative technology that's coming out. But if you were going to optimize a part, design it inside of Fusion, send it over to Inventor, again, to live inside of a larger assembly.

And think about all of the other ways that this might come together in using Fusion to Inventor. It might be, if you're using Fusion 360 today, sending this over to live inside of a larger skidded system. It could be to be laid out in a factory floor right. There's a lot of use cases where you might take your Fusion data and send it over to Inventor.

And then thinking about it the other way, going from Inventor to Fusion. So it might purely just be for collaboration, whether that's inside your four walls or with someone that's in your supply chain. It might also be to use EAGLE. So here's another great example. Hopefully some of you were able to see the incredible connection between Autodesk EAGLE and Fusion 360. And now we can add Inventor into that mix, where we're taking full product designs, bringing it into Inventor, and now including PCM design and electrical controls.

LOREN WELCH: And one of the things that I think is important here when we talk about this, a lot of these workflows, it might not be within your four walls. It's really about this greater Autodesk ecosystem. We have a huge number of Fusion 360 subscribers, we have a huge number of Inventor subscribers, and customers either through suites, or collections, or standalone. And right now, they've kind of been on two different islands, right?

And so if I'm a Inventor customer and I want to really access this ecosystem of machine shops and all of these more agile, smaller companies that are using Fusion inside of their workshop for CAM and for other purposes, now we have a way to connect these two. So it really helps open up this greater ecosystem for both Inventor users to connect with Fusion Customers and for Fusion Customers to now participate with Inventor customers in a lot of these supply chain and ecosystem kind of workflows.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah. And Loren used the right word, it's open, right? I mean, the goal here is to be open. If you're using both, if someone in your supply chain is using one or the other, you can collaborate back and forth. Which is super important, and I can't wait to see all the workflows it unlocks.

So once I hit all the play buttons-- there we go. So the first one-- there we go. So let's take a look at a supply chain example between Inventor going to Fusion, and we'll use-- I'm going in. I'm coming in. All right. Loren, do you want to switch over?

LOREN WELCH: Yeah.

JAMIE SCHERER: Wait, you're first, right?

LOREN WELCH: Yeah, I guess I am first.

JAMIE SCHERER: Are you? Or am I first?

LOREN WELCH: Well rehearsed is what we are. So here I've gotten Inventor design. It's an IPT file. And I've got it here up in Fusion Team, and a mouse that doesn't work-- a mouse that still doesn't work. There we go.

And so here I've put it in Fusion Team. I've sent an invitation to Jamie inside of Fusion Team to join this project and take a look at this file. And Jamie is a machine shop in New Jersey. And so I simply want to send in this data and I want to get some information as far as-- I'll be really basic here-- I'll just say, can you machine this for us? And I'll go and post that comment into Fusion Team, into a location that Jamie and I have shared.

So it's an actual Inventor file in Fusion Team. And using the viewer inside of Fusion Team, I can add comments. I could even have done a little bit of markup here, just to be really clear on some things with Jamie . And then I'll switch over to Jamie and see what he sees.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah. So it's thinking about it.

LOREN WELCH: Oh, I think--

JAMIE SCHERER: 7.

LOREN WELCH: It helps if I do the right number.

JAMIE SCHERER: Numbers are important. So in this case, as Loren mentioned, I'm inside of the Fusion Team. So we're collaborating together. He's invited me as a supplier. I would only have access, as maybe someone who's not in his organization, to the projects that he invites me to. So it's important to know that this is not all-encompassing. I wouldn't have access to anything other than what he's invited me to.

And if I take a look as someone in the inside of Fusion, you'll see I can see the Inventor files inside of the Fusion data panel. And we'll do a couple of things here. So first, I'm just going to go ahead and open the Inventor IPT so everyone can see-- I feel like a magician. You can see that's in Inventor IPT. And, of course, I brought this in as in Inventor file into Fusion.

But what I want to point out, which I think is really important, is you'll see in the timeline that there's a reference. There's a link to the Inventor data. And now, if you're familiar with Fusion 360, this is really powerful as it relates to the workflow. Because now, I have the Inventor data at the beginning of my timeline, and now anything that I might do to that data afterwards is a subsequent feature. So if added holes, if I added chamfers, if I made edits to the geometry, it's happening, in time, after the import of the Inventor data.

So I'll also-- if I have another file open here-- just look at another workflow. So I can open the data directly, as I mentioned and save it as inside of Fusion, and start to use it. Or I'm going to start off with a file-- this is maybe a design that I've worked on before-- and what I want to do in this case is just insert the file into my current design.

So you'll see that I'll bring in the Inventor IPT. Just like I did when I opened it, I either open it and save it as or insert it. I'm just going to go ahead and flip this. And now what I want to do is start to put some tool paths on it, right? Pretty simple. So let's jump over into the CAM workspace inside of Fusion 360, and I'm going to create a new setup.

So really simple-- Loren sent me over this part. I'm going to go ahead and just create a new setup. And-- oops, looks like I missed my x-axis there. There we go. So again, creating my new setup, I'm going to put my G54 in the corner, say, OK. I'm going to create two tool paths really quickly. We're going to create a facing operation. I'll grab my face [INAUDIBLE] that I use out of my library. I'll go ahead and create that.

And next, I'm just going to go ahead and create a 3D adaptive clearing tool path. I'm going to go ahead and rough this out using my favorite tool which is my 3/8 bullnose. And I'm going to say, OK. We'll let that calculate.

Now, in this case, I might start to look at this design. In which case, I might reach out to my friend Loren and say, are these obnoxious fillets really necessary? Are they cosmetic? So now, again, we have the opportunity to collaborate back and forth.

And a really good example, with the tool that I'm using, I actually can't rough out that entire pocket. Because you can see how tiny the bottom of that face is. Now, I could, absolutely, machine it. I'd have to switch tools, maybe use something smaller, but this is an opportunity where I might jump back into Fusion Team and leave a comment for Loren and say, are those big fillets in the pockets necessary? Is it possible for us to make them 60,000ths, which is the radius of the tool that I'm using.

This way I can bang them out. I can do it with one setup. I don't have to switch tools. So I'm going to jump back.

LOREN WELCH: So you're able to do more with less, faster.

JAMIE SCHERER: More better--

[LAUGHTER]

LOREN WELCH: Yeah, yeah. Yeah.

JAMIE SCHERER: That's it. So I'll jump into Fusion Team. And just like before, I'll grab the Inventor IPT. And I'm going to mark it up. I'm going to leave a comment for Loren and kindly suggest that he comes in here. And I'll leave him a nice note that says--

LOREN WELCH: And this really is a great example of really what happens in supply chains, as many of you know. If Jamie's a value-added supplier of mine, he can ask me this question. Are these fillets necessary? If you do a smaller size fillet, I can machine it faster, cheaper. These are the kind of suppliers I want, and this is the kind of ecosystem we're looking to promote within the Autodesk tools.

JAMIE SCHERER: So I've added my comment. I'm asking Loren to make the changes. I put that information inside of Fusion Team. He would absolutely get a notification through email that says, your supplier Jamie has added a comment.

LOREN WELCH: Yep. We'll skip the email, and I'll go right to the fact that I'm Fusion team, and you can see that I get this update. So I can click right on the thumbnail. I jump right in Fusion Team, and I can get a good understanding of what Jamie was referring to.

So I zoom right in to those fillets he's specifying. And he's asking me for faster, smaller, cost me less if I adjust the size of those fillets. So it's a really good example of real-time feedback.

So as in Inventor user, I can just hop back into Inventor, and I'm going to completely cheat, and not only am I going to put those pockets in, I'm going to change the fillets down to 20,000, I think.

JAMIE SCHERER: 60, please.

LOREN WELCH: 60,000. There we go. And I actually added more pockets to this. And all I'm doing here is I'm just going to go ahead and Control-S, and I'm going to save this. Now, because my file lives in Fusion Team, I've saved it back to the cloud. So that's where it's at.

So from this point-- and again, that's where this Autodesk Desktop Connector is helping me. So I get this little A right here. You'll see it's processing. I can actually go ahead and take a look at my pending actions, and you can see right there it's moving that file-- it was modified and it's moving it up to Fusion Team.

So that's what Desktop Connector is doing. It's allowing me to access Fusion Team as if it's a network drive.

AUDIENCE: Will it save that locally as well as in the cloud?

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, will it save locally as well as in the cloud? So we cache it, but it is not a sync utility. It is a connection utility. So that's an important distinction. And thanks for the question.

So if many of you are familiar with what used to be Desktop Sync, many of you have noticed Desktop Sync does not sync anymore. We kind of trailed that off. And that also went to a 360 drive. Again, I'm sorry for all the naming conventions.

But what's happening now is this Desktop Connector utility is really just giving you that cloud access. There is an offline mode-- so you have your cache-- but it is not a sync utility. I don't know-- Michael, did I describe that properly? All right. There we go.

AUDIENCE: With the connection-- [CLEARS THROAT] Excuse me. That was actually pretty fast. What's a typical response time [INAUDIBLE] cache [INAUDIBLE]?

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, how fast is it? It's really about your latency and bandwidth. So there's no-- it's quick, I guess. It's like a save operation. It's pushing it up. But it is bandwidth dependent. So I don't--

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

JAMIE SCHERER: To give you an idea, we're on conference Wi-Fi and I've been staring at the update in Fusion since before the first question. So it's pretty quick.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: So Desktop Connector, it's scanning disks for the locations that you provided to it. And then as soon as anything changes, on average, we were trying this. We did our class yesterday-- it takes about 10 seconds for it to detect it and upload a new version to cloud. Of course, if the file's huge, it might take slightly longer, but it's really quick.

I saw some confused faces earlier. So in this example, everything he's doing in Fusion is on the cloud. So all the data lives and Fusion Team, it's on cloud. So what Desktop Connector is doing, it's that bridge Loren was talking about earlier. It shows you a Windows drive or a Mac Finder drive that's an extension of your cloud data. It's a view in it so that any desktop product like Inventor, AutoCAD, Revit can see the same data. So because it's integrated into the OS, any file open dialogue now gives you access to the same data that you see in the cloud through Fusion.

LOREN WELCH: So I'm going to go ahead and-- does that all make sense what Bankim just said? Oh, question.

AUDIENCE: I have a project team which [INAUDIBLE] made up of AutoCAD users and Inventor user. Do you have the same workflow functionally with [INAUDIBLE] files?

LOREN WELCH: So AnyCAD between Inventor and AutoCAD, yeah, is there. If you're talking about the relationship-- I'm sorry, the question, I'll repeat it, was, Do you have that same relationship with AutoCAD-- and is it with Inventor and Fusion or just with Fusion Team?

AUDIENCE: With Fusion as well. But I have people who have AutoCAD and Fusion [INAUDIBLE]

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: OK. So right now, in the current preview that we have out, we support Inventor and SOLIDWORKS files associatively into Fusion, but other formats are on the roadmap coming into early next year.

AUDIENCE: OK.

JAMIE SCHERER: So we'll jump-- and thank you for the questions. So we'll jump back into Fusion Team. You can see, obviously, I've been notified now. Loren told me that he made those changes. As I already alluded to, I, within seconds, while I had my Fusion file open, I'm already notified that there is a pending update. Now, like Loren said before, this is not automatic. It will automatically tell you that there is an update, but you have to choose when you're ready to consume it.

And really, it's as simple as me either updating it in the browser or up here in the toolbar. You can see that, now I'm going to go through and grab the new data. It's going to update from me in the second.

LOREN WELCH: So Jamie--

JAMIE SCHERER: Yes?

LOREN WELCH: --what's the advantage here versus importing an Inventor file as a STEP file, and putting a tool path on it, and then modifying it? What's the time savings to the Fusion user here?

JAMIE SCHERER: Well, the primary time savings is my tool paths are already ready to update. So whereas what we've been able to do in the past is bring an Inventor file over. But in this case-- whoops, I didn't want to simulate, I want to update my tool paths, generate-- so, sorry, there we go. So again, I don't have to retranslate the data, reimport it, create another setup, add those tool paths. It's as easy as just consuming the update. And in this case, since I used an adaptive clearing tool path-- I didn't select the pockets, I used adaptive cleaning, which is going to go through and create a tool path based on the geometry, it'll update automatically.

So I didn't have to go through and pick all those pockets and change my heights. All of that stuff updated automatically because the data changed. And now, I could continue and maybe come in here and create a horizontal tool path, a finishing tool path, something like that. But it is literally that easy for me to consume the changes that might happen very frequently between my customers, if I was a supplier, or a job shop, or something like that.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: And another nice thing is, because this is all in the cloud right now, everything is a relationship away. So we know that this Inventor part file is being used by another Fusion user in AnyCAD way. So every time Loren over here makes changes to his design, behind the scenes a lot of the work to enable the AnyCAD associativity can happen in the cloud. So that when Jamie's ready to consume it, it's a one-click update for him that happens almost immediately. He's not waiting for a lot of time to process the file to maintain all of the face IDs, and edge IDs, et cetera. So that's a real benefit of doing this in the cloud.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah. And one of the really nice things in the example that I mentioned, I wasn't maybe able to machine to the bottom of that one pocket, because the tool that I wanted to use was bigger than the bottom of that pocket. I talked to Loren, who is my customer, and he said, yeah, I know, I just put those giant fillets on the bottom because they looked cool. Which is what most designers like myself do. But as a machinist, it would be helpful-- it would be important from a time perspective if we can remove those. So this is a great example of where that might work.

And I saw a question in the back.

AUDIENCE: Yeah. [INAUDIBLE] team, you get [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: Yes, you do. I don't if you saw that. We're actually in version 10.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah.

LOREN WELCH: We've been using the same data set to practice.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah. Not the first time we've looked at it. But, yeah, you can actually see, in the browser it's probably small to read, but you can see it says v10 now. It said 9 before. And it will continue to update the name.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Actually if you expand the data panel, [INAUDIBLE] the IPT [INAUDIBLE]--

JAMIE SCHERER: Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Here as well, after a refresh. So you can see, it did say 9, now it says 10. So yeah, it's going to track the versions for you as well.

AUDIENCE: So you could stick to the old version?

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Yeah.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Sorry. So just like you can in Fusion, you can pick an older version and say promote to tip, and go back to that state in time. Everything works just the way you would expect it-- full version and full relationships between all the files.

LOREN WELCH: We had a question over there.

AUDIENCE: Yeah. Once the link is established, does this lock the Inventor user down without [INAUDIBLE] the files?

LOREN WELCH: So-- I'm trying to understand the question. So the question was, once this link is made, you want to know, does it lock down the Inventor file? Do you mean in Fusion Team, or are you--

AUDIENCE: If we're working in Inventor and Vault and we're pushing files through Fusion, after [INAUDIBLE] to establish in Vault and Inventor, we can't read from the files.

LOREN WELCH: So we've made some exceptions with Vault, primarily on when Fusion designs come into an Inventor assembly and how we handle those references with Vault. So as many of you Vault users know, if there's been an external reference before we just don't let you check that in. We made an exception with Fusion, and we've done some tech on the back end. So we will never move to move a Fusion file locally and put it into Vault, but we manage that reference. And we put a virtual item in the Vault so it manages the BOM correctly.

Now, going the other way, Vault has done some work with Fusion team on some shared spaces and things like that. So that might kind of fit the workflow you're doing. But as far as like Inventor into Fusion, the way it works today with the technology preview is you're putting IPTs into Fusion Team, and you're letting Fusion Team kind of handle that relationship.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Maybe I misunderstood the question. But, I think, in Vault, like you said, if you have a file that's already referenced by something else, you can rename it without going through a whole process of updating all the references above it. In Fusion, file resolution referencing works differently than Inventor. So because it's all a database in the cloud, you can rename files or move them around, but the reference identifier to that file stays the same in the cloud. So doing the renames and moves in Fusion Team doesn't break any of these relationships.

JAMIE SCHERER: All right. So just to summarize really quickly, we just went through a really quick example, but hopefully-- I can see the gears are turning. You're starting to think about the connection points, or the workflows, or where this might work for your individual organization. So this is just one example from Inventor to Fusion. It could be for nonlinear simulation. It could be for know connecting with EAGLE, like we mentioned before right. There's a ton of use cases. And there's probably a ton of people inside your organization or in your supply chain that you might want to start working with.

LOREN WELCH: So a real quick check-- I'm sorry, I forgot-- how many people have asked questions so far? All right, you're going to have to-- I don't have a cannon, so--

[LAUGHTER]

JAMIE SCHERER: That's impressive there. So far so good.

LOREN WELCH: Oh, Just short. Anybody I missed? There we go. All right, good.

So let's talk about another-- whoops--

JAMIE SCHERER: I already did it. I already did it.

LOREN WELCH: So the next workflow, which is probably a pretty common one, is relying on the strengths of both tools. So in this case, we're going to really rely on the strength of Fusion 360 for concept design when we're going to rework the handle on this fishing reel. So as a longtime Inventor customer, I've got this design, I want to refresh it with a new concept, and I only rely on my Fusion guys in-house to do some concept design and work that into my Inventor assembly.

So same thing, we can start in--

[INTERPOSING VOICES]

What's that?

JAMIE SCHERER: Same thing. You're going to switch to me first. So in this example, again, we might be in the same organization. I could be-- Loren might be in engineering. I might be in the conceptual design, or product development, or something like that.

And in a really quick example, I might be working on new handles for this fishing reel. So I'm just going to go ahead and leave Loren a comment here inside of Fusion. So I'll just say, Loren, check out these-- whoops-- new handles. So just really quickly, I'm going to post that to my Fusion project. You'll see that, right here, I've added a comment. And this is automatically working with Fusion team, that's the way that Fusion works directly inside of the canvas. And you'll see version number 8, Jamie added a comment, Loren, check these out. So very simple for me to go ahead and quickly not only make the design, but leave it and send it over to Loren where he can bring it over into Inventor.

LOREN WELCH: Yep. So same thing. Here, you can see I'm in Fusion Team. Here you see this winding handle. It says in use by Jamie Scherer. But when I click on it, again, I get the comments and the note, and I can click in here and get the nice preview inside the Fusion Team and see what he's talking about. So he's got this new design for me, and I want to see what it looks like in Inventor.

So let's just go to Inventor. And Alt-Tab, not working. Awesome. So let's go to Inventor.

So here I have my assembly. And again, those of you that are familiar with AnyCAD, it's the same workflow. So I can actually do any type of insert, open, and I just browse the file type I'm looking for. So again, I can place from imported CAD, that's the standard AnyCAD dialogue. And you'll see here, what I'm looking for, along with all of my standard AnyCAD formats, is I can actually go right to-- it's probably staring me right in the face-- Fusion files, which is a .fusiondesign design. OK?

So I go here. Using the desktop connector, you can see-- and I'll browse up so you can see it-- if I go to my computer, you'll see I have access to my different cloud storage connections that Desktop Connector allows me to go right to. So just like a network drive, I go into Fusion Team, it lists all the hubs that either I own or are shared with me. So I go in here. I go right to our AU class. I've got this huge, new Inventor project. I could have probably made this at a higher level.

But here, you'll see I have these Fusion design files. Now, what Jamie has, he's got all of these components inside of Fusion. So I want the winding handle design. I'll go ahead and say open. And again, what you'll notice here is now Desktop Connector is doing that call to the cloud. It's saying this the Fusion design I need inside of Inventor. And it's going to go ahead and grab that for me.

I am on conference Wi-Fi, which is--

JAMIE SCHERER: So while we're waiting, as an industrial designer, I am immediately thinking of ways that I can change this design to make Loren's life more difficult.

[LAUGHTER]

LOREN WELCH: So here you'll see, standard AnyCAD workflow. So I can say-- I can convert this. I can convert this just to an IPT, but there's no-- that's just like a dumb solid. if I just-- I don't know. I'm not going to do that.

So I wanted the reference model. So I can go here. I can load the model so I can see kind of a preview what it looks like. Because what's really nice with this is I see this handle, I see all the bodies. So I could selectively say which bodies are components I want from Fusion and which ones I don't, right? In this case, I want all of them. And just like the rest of your AnyCAD workflows, it's going to bring this. And you'll notice in my browser I'll have that special kind of browser node to let me know that this is a live AnyCAD reference, and it allows me to place this inside of my assembly.

So I'm just going to place it here. I only need one of them. And down here in my browser, you'll see this winding handle. But you'll also notice it says v8. So I'm actually getting the version number listed as that browser mode as well, which is super handy.

So my middle mouse button's not even working. This is beautiful. So let's go ahead and do a joint here quick and put that in the wrong spot completely. So again, I'm not a demo guy anymore. So just keep that in mind, be patient. So repeat joint. I'll lock it there-- much better. I'll go ahead and say OK. And then I'm actually going to come in here and just add one last constraint to lock that in.

So now, you can see I've got a Fusion design-- it works inside of Inventor like a native Inventor file. But I'm looking at this, and if I'm really going to redesign this, it's not really the redesign I'm looking for. So this is where I can go back into Fusion Team and I can do a markup. So from here, if I want to do anything crazy, but I'm just going to go in here, add a new comment, [INAUDIBLE] my keyboard's not even working now, by the way. This is so awesome. Keyboard's totally not working.

So that's my markup.

JAMIE SCHERER: Give me a switch.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah.

[LAUGHTER]

Can you go ahead and make this cooler?

JAMIE SCHERER: Good.

LOREN WELCH: Yep.

JAMIE SCHERER: So at this point, I will pick up the phone and ask Loren what his scribble was. But more importantly-- so in a really quick example-- we're doing something very quick between Fusion and Inventor. But think about the power of me as whether we're in the same organization or we're in-- again, I might be an external vendor or I might be someone who's collaborating with Loren on a project, I can easily come in here and make some quick changes to this design. So whether it was because I'm losing sleep at night because I want to make changes to this, or Loren, my customer, my colleague might have requested that we make some changes.

So we're going to try out a new design here. I think that that looks--

LOREN WELCH: I would have commented I want different materials too.

JAMIE SCHERER: I'll give you different materials if that's what you want. You're paying me to do this, so we'll go ahead and do it here. We'll just add-- we're going to make these a red plastic and aluminum on that there. And again, pretty simple. I'm going to hit a save. I might add a version name if I want to. Update it, per Loren.

I might add more comments. Just like I did before, I can add them right here inside of the Fusion 360 interface. But now, through the magic of hotel Wi-Fi and Connector, we're going to send it over. Go ahead, Loren.

LOREN WELCH: So what goes on here, just so you known. And again, we didn't specify earlier. This is a technology preview, so we're looking for a lot of feedback on this. And initially, what's happened, for us in Inventor to be doing pings to the cloud all the time and be that chatty, it would probably affect people's performance. So we're relying on Fusion Team as a communication and notification method. And if you open this-- if I were to open this-- close down Inventor and open it, it would say, hey, that reference is updated, and I'd have the lightning bolt. But if I have an open session and we're doing this like this, you're not going to see the lightning bolt, because we're not doing pings to that cloud reference all the time.

But what I can do is I can just go down to the winding handle, and it's totally off-screen. This is awesome. I can either say Edit, edit update, or I can say check for updates. And so it's going to do that ping to Fusion Team on the data set right here. It tells me an update is available to this data set. I say, yes. And you see now it loads it. So now it does the call to grab that topology.

Dead air.

AUDIENCE: So [INAUDIBLE] updates with Fusion Team. you can have email notifications [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. So Travis just asked the question about notifications from Fusion Team with updates. And again, I could be hopping in and out of my Outlook to show you these updates and these notifications, but I'm not going-- I can't even do Alt-Tab on my keyboard. So we're going to do what we can.

So you'll notice what happened here. Not only did I get the topology updates, but I got the appearance and material updates as well. If I actually go in here to inside of this referenced assembly, and I right-click on-- let's grab this guy here-- I can't go down to properties. You're kidding me. It's off-screen.

[INTERPOSING VOICES]

LOREN WELCH: We'll do it at the top-level perhaps. The menu's off-screen. I would show you that the physical properties are matching up. Question?

AUDIENCE: Detach your browser.

AUDIENCE: Or make your Inventor window smaller.

JAMIE SCHERER: Come on, Loren.

LOREN WELCH: Look at all these tips.

JAMIE SCHERER: What are you, new?

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. Yeah, I prefer it'd just work. This is crazy.

AUDIENCE: Now you sound like a customer.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah, yeah, yeah.

[LAUGHTER]

AUDIENCE: My customer [INAUDIBLE].

LOREN WELCH: Stop it. Why is it not grabbing it. There we go. So I properties, and go over here to physical, and it actually, once I update, grabs all the actual physical properties from Fusion. So again, it's mapping material libraries between the two. It does a really solid job. The work the team did on here is, I don't know-- I'm nerding out, but it's amazing how much work they did between these two things.

So again, you get the idea. Now, one of the things that Jamie had mentioned earlier is, just like you see in Fusion with the timeline, if he reads an IPT file and he adds new features, it'll do that consumption and build the rest of the features. Well, same thing here. If I need to do things inside of Inventor, like bolted connections, assembly-level features. He's already got the hole there, because he's a little too smart as a supplier. But I could do things like bolted connections and add those additional downstream features inside of Inventor. And again, it would consume the updates from Fusion and those would be downstream features at the assembly level.

Question, yeah.

AUDIENCE: So you have this as a live link to Fusion right now. At this stage, can you load this into an Inventor assembly?

LOREN WELCH: So it already comes over as in AnyCAD assembly here. But you want to just convert it to a .iam or a .ipt?

AUDIENCE: Right. Say I want to sever the connection and go my own way.

LOREN WELCH: So if you do edit import you can do a convert, but you lose the benefit of it. So it's just like AnyCAD. But if you--

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. If you want a separate, yeah, you can break reference.

AUDIENCE: OK.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. So it's just like AnyCAD reference, you can break it. Once you break it, you cannot restore it though.

AUDIENCE: That's fine.

LOREN WELCH: Yep.

JAMIE SCHERER: Back to the PowerPoint.

AUDIENCE: It's only one direction.

JAMIE SCHERER: Say that again-- question?

AUDIENCE: It's only one direction.

JAMIE SCHERER: So it works--

AUDIENCE: Once you break it, there's no going back.

JAMIE SCHERER: That's right. Correct. Yeah. You'd have to reimport it. Jump back to the PowerPoint.

LOREN WELCH: Oh, the PowerPoint.

JAMIE SCHERER: You have the PowerPoint.

AUDIENCE: You'd have to put it up [INAUDIBLE] and in Fusion if you wanted to go back.

JAMIE SCHERER: At that point, Loren could reimport it and make it a reference again. So if he chose to break it, then he could reimport it. So just to recap, we used a really quick and a really short example. But think about-- we're one slide ahead of where I wanted to be.

[LAUGHTER]

So think about the connection points. So we use a really quick example, but I could be a small industrial equipment manufacturer who's sending-- I'm a tier two, three supplier. I'm sending my Fusion design to Loren, where he's putting it inside of a larger inventor assembly. He's not responsible for that piece of the equipment. I am. He buys it from me. And he wants to consume updates as we're working on the project together. There's so many use cases in going in both directions.

And so, as you're already wondering, what the heck is he doing? So Las Vegas is famous for its kind of duo magician acts. So Siegfried and Roy, Penn and Teller, Loren and Jamie. So what we want to talk to you about is that this is not magic, in the sense that Loren and I are known to be onstage and make things look like magic, but let's talk about the things that it's not. Or what this can't do, or how this doesn't work. Because I know you're already thinking, and you've ask some of the questions already.

So what it's not is bi-directional. And what I mean by that is it works in either direction, but it works in only one direction at a time.

LOREN WELCH: Again, think a bridge, right? There's two lanes. You're not in one lane driving in forward and reverse.

JAMIE SCHERER: So you can go from Inventor to Fusion. You can go from Fusion to Inventor. But you're not going to go in both directions simultaneously. You're updating in one direction or the other. It's not complete magic. This isn't the holy grail of data features on both sides.

But what you can do is either import the geometry, which would be I take data from Loren and I want to edit it Fusion, well, then I'm going to import it. But if I want to bring it into Fusion and consume updates later, then I would bring it in this AnyCAD workflow that we've talked about. And Loren mentioned before, consider changes in the design. So the best example-- the simplest one-- is if it was a cube and it became a sphere, a constraint or a joint might not automatically update.

I think everyone realizes that. But consider that the updates are being driven in both directions. It's updating by those face IDs. Holes, chamfers, joints, constraints, all the geometry that you build off of it will absolutely update as long as you don't take a fishing reel and turn it into a jet engine. That's where you might have to add some new joints. And I'd argue that you probably don't want the joints to update automatically from your fishing reel to your jet engine.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. And so a great way to think about it, say look at native Inventor files in your assembly. When you take an IPT and you put it in your assembly, and you add joints, and you add constraints, different things like that, if you delete a face or an edge ID, it's going to have an effect on the assembly. So we're doing the same thing between our different design tools. So if I take an IPT and I put it up in Fusion Team, and a Fusion 360 User consumes it, and he adds additional features or it's in his Fusion multi-body layout, and he's got it constrained a certain way. If I get rid of an edge by adding a chamfer or if I completely redo a cube and I change all the face and edge IDs, it's going to blow up those constraints.

So again, it's not magic. We're looking at outside topology-- face and edge IDs. We're not digging into all the nuts and bolts. Again, it's a technology preview. We're looking for a ton of feedback on how you plan to use this, what works, what doesn't, and we're really looking for a lot of feedback in these areas.

JAMIE SCHERER: So that said, it's not magic, but it's pretty magical (LAUGHING) to be able to do that. So hopefully you guys all think the same. Time for questions-- Jerry.

AUDIENCE: When do you expect support for [INAUDIBLE] assemblies going into Fusion.

LOREN WELCH: Bankim?

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Thanks. So we're looking at that sometime early next year, hopefully by global launch.

LOREN WELCH: Question?

AUDIENCE: Will you be making this PowerPoint available?

LOREN WELCH: And we should be repeating the questions. Jerry asked, when are we going to support Inventor assemblies? Bankim said, tomorrow.

[LAUGHTER]

No, he said global launch next year. Will we make this PowerPoint available? Yes, we can add it into the speaker notes for the--

AUDIENCE: I appreciate that, because one of my questions from boss is that I really want to know what this 360 is all about.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. We couldn't give you the PowerPoint ahead of time, because--

JAMIE SCHERER: Then you wouldn't show up at 8:00 AM.

[LAUGHTER].

[INTERPOSING VOICES]

AUDIENCE: --as long as I've got this to show you.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah

LOREN WELCH: Sure.

JAMIE SCHERER: Amy didn't announce this until--

LOREN WELCH: Yeah, Yeah.

JAMIE SCHERER: Yeah.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: So you did show the safe harbor slide, right?

JAMIE SCHERER: Read it out loud, right now.

[LAUGHTER]

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. I will add it twice--

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Because I just answered a futures question. Don't hold me to a date. That's what we're shooting for. Another thing, while I have the mic, so you asked a question earlier about commenting and things showing up. I pulled out my phone, but these two guys were hogging the mic. So Fusion also has a mobile app. So the comments that you make, you can get them on the road.

And if you had multiple people in a project that you want to get feedback from, another nice thing in the comments is you can say, @Loren look at this. So that way, if all of us were in that project, we don't all have to look at the notification. I know what's meant for me and what's meant for Loren. And you can target it that way.

JAMIE SCHERER: There's a question right here.

AUDIENCE: Yes. If you want to use an Inventor file in Fusion, and you are using both, what is the [INAUDIBLE] workflow, and you've got to [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, if you're an Inventor user who is also using Vault and you want to put your data in Fusion team to support this workflow. So there's-- if you're going Inventor into Fusion, and the data's involved, you can either do a pack and go or you can take that individual file from your workspace, and just using the Desktop Connector in Windows Explorer, just drag and drop it into Fusion team. So it's as easy as a drag and DROP and then it files up there.

Now, realize, it's moved a copy from your local into Fusion team, so it's not Vault. That one that's in Fusion team isn't Vault-managed anymore. But that's a Vault and Fusion team longer term thing where we're trying to figure out how to handle that type of workflow. So I hope that answers.

AUDIENCE: So right now don't rely on this connecting [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, don't rely on connecting through Vault. Yes. If you're going Inventor into Fusion Team, that is not currently a Vault workflow OK? That's a Desktop Connector, Fusion Team workflow. And then we had questions back there.

AUDIENCE: Will you be able to view on the markup on the mobile app?

LOREN WELCH: The question was, will you be able to view the markups on the mobile app. And certainly-- you will, yes.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: You can do them all. You can do a markup on the mobile app and view it.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. Question over there. Maybe

AUDIENCE: Maybe i missed it, but if you go [INAUDIBLE] and you do the update, but you don't like the update they did, how do you revert back.

LOREN WELCH: So I'm trying to understand the question-- so you said Inventor of Fusion, and then there is a comment, the Inventor user makes an update and sends another update to Fusion?

AUDIENCE: No. The Fusion user does an update or makes a change, and [INAUDIBLE] the update but you don't like the change they made, after you've done the update how do your revert back to--

[INAUDIBLE]

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Yeah, I can show that.

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, again, if you're an Inventor user that takes a Fusion update, they make another update, and you don't like that one, how do you go back to the prior. Correct?

AUDIENCE: Yes.

JAMIE SCHERER: Right.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: So because this is in the cloud, and it's all version aware, we can look at the version history of the entire design and there's a way to just promote an older version. So now I just made the older version before he made the change to the red handles, and now Inventor will see the same update as soon as he checks for updates.

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. So that's got to be done-- I'm sorry, I'm yelling. That has to be done on the Fusion side. Inventor, because it's bringing on the version that's the tip version from Fusion Team. And it's got to take that database kind of file and basically bring it in as a CAD I don't know how to describe it better than that. Whereas if it's going the other way, Fusion, because the Inventor file lives in Fusion Team. It keeps all those versions. The Fusion user could pick that himself. The Inventor user would have to ask the Fusion user to go back a version and then just reupdate.

AUDIENCE: Or just make sure you check in to Vault, maybe [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: If you're doing that, just don't save, I guess. But yeah, those are the types of things where we've got to do some more refinement for sure.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: What's that.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] to the Inventor side if we could actually kind of a [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: Yeah. And there is an ideas page, we can hit that. Question.

AUDIENCE: So if a Fusion user makes a change and it comes back into Inventor, will the Inventor person be able to project geometry [INAUDIBLE] use it in his model.

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, if a Fusion design comes into an Inventor design, can you use that for projecting? Yeah. It is solid b-rep geometry. You can project edges. You can add new features. Yeah. Yeah.

AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] with your workflow, you don't have to just be inside the Fusion desktop [INAUDIBLE], you could also be there from Teams. So if she's part of a team project, she can promote that to the newest version [INAUDIBLE] older version and newest versions, [INAUDIBLE] team. Because she may not have access to the Fusion desktop.

LOREN WELCH: Exactly. If you're Fusion team, you could pick a new version right through that. You don't have to go into Fusion 360 to do that promotion.

AUDIENCE: There's a question in the back.

LOREN WELCH: Where's the question of the back. There we go.

AUDIENCE: This will also work with Inventor LT?

LOREN WELCH: So the question was, will it work with Inventor LT? So if an Inventor LT user is invited to a team hub and you get the Desktop Connector, yeah, you can take an IPT and put it up there. Yeah. If you just have Inventor LT, and that's all. You don't have Fusion Team access yourself, so you couldn't start the workflow, but if you got invited into the workflow, you could definitely participate. Yes.

JAMIE SCHERER: More questions?

LOREN WELCH: Yes?

AUDIENCE: I thought you guys said this would work with [INAUDIBLE]-- like, you could edit the [INAUDIBLE] file in Fusion. I didn't see how that would work. If you could add it [INAUDIBLE] Fusion file. [INAUDIBLE]

LOREN WELCH: No, no. So you can add additional features on both ways, you can't edit the topology that comes in. I guess you could do like a delete face, or you could do that kind of stuff. But what you're saying is that, that had a bunch of pockets and fillets. It's not bidirectional in the aspect where if you make a Fusion edit to that hole, it's not going to update it in Inventor. But in Fusion, if you add additional features, those features will be preserved, even if I make in Inventor change.

Because that's the AnyCAD part, right? So when you do the AnyCAD, it means you're not converting to .fusiondesign or to a .ipt, you're actually referencing that live thing and adding additional features to it. So it's kind of like a derived workflow, is kind of the best way to--

AUDIENCE: You're putting more features on, but at that point it becomes a Fusion design.

LOREN WELCH: Those additional feet features only live in Fusion.

BANKIM CHAREGAONKAR: Correct. But what you could do downstream is pick that Fusion design and bring it back into Inventor. But it's not the same file that's being modified.

LOREN WELCH: Very good question. Any other questions or comments?

JAMIE SCHERER: So Steve, to your question, here's a really, really quick example. So a part coming from Inventor. You can see it in the timeline. It has a link. This is the reference to the Inventor file.

And then the second action in the timeline is me adding the hole to it. So everything that I do in Fusion subsequent to that import would be in the timeline and live and act just like any other Fusion data.

LOREN WELCH: So we're definitely at our time. We can't thank you guys enough for showing up at 8:00 AM on Thursday. There are plenty of Fusion and Inventor stickers by the projector if you guys want some. Thank you very much.

Downloads

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サードパーティのサービス

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サイト動作に必須:オートデスクのサイトが正常に動作し、お客様へサービスを提供するために必要な機能です

Qualtrics
弊社はQualtricsを利用し、アンケート調査やオンライン フォームを通じてお客様が弊社にフィードバックを提供できるようにしています。アンケートの回答は無作為に選んだお客様にお願いしておりますが、お客様から自発的に弊社にフィードバックを提供することも可能です。データを収集する目的は、アンケートの回答前にお客様がとられた行動を、より正しく理解するためです。収集したデータは、発生していた可能性がある問題のトラブルシューティングに役立てさせていただきます。. Qualtrics プライバシー ポリシー
Akamai mPulse
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Akamai mPulseを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Akamai mPulse プライバシー ポリシー
Digital River
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Digital Riverを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Digital River プライバシー ポリシー
Dynatrace
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Dynatraceを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Dynatrace プライバシー ポリシー
Khoros
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Khorosを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Khoros プライバシー ポリシー
Launch Darkly
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Launch Darklyを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Launch Darkly プライバシー ポリシー
New Relic
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、New Relicを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. New Relic プライバシー ポリシー
Salesforce Live Agent
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Salesforce Live Agentを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Salesforce Live Agent プライバシー ポリシー
Wistia
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Wistiaを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Wistia プライバシー ポリシー
Tealium
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Tealiumを利用しています。データには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Tealium プライバシー ポリシー<>
Typepad Stats
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Typepad Statsを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Typepad Stats プライバシー ポリシー
Geo Targetly
当社では、Geo Targetly を使用して Web サイトの訪問者を最適な Web ページに誘導し、訪問者のいる場所に応じて調整したコンテンツを提供します。Geo Targetly は、Web サイト訪問者の IP アドレスを使用して、訪問者のデバイスのおおよその位置を特定します。このため、訪問者は (ほとんどの場合) 自分のローカル言語でコンテンツを閲覧できます。Geo Targetly プライバシー ポリシー
SpeedCurve
弊社は、SpeedCurve を使用して、Web ページの読み込み時間と画像、スクリプト、テキストなど後続の要素の応答性を計測することにより、お客様の Web サイト エクスペリエンスのパフォーマンスをモニタリングおよび計測します。SpeedCurve プライバシー ポリシー
Qualified
Qualified is the Autodesk Live Chat agent platform. This platform provides services to allow our customers to communicate in real-time with Autodesk support. We may collect unique ID for specific browser sessions during a chat. Qualified Privacy Policy

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Google Optimize
弊社はGoogle Optimizeを利用して、弊社サイトの新機能をテストし、お客様に合わせた方法で機能を使えるようにしています。そのため弊社では、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から、行動に関するデータを収集しています。収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID などが含まれます。機能のテストの結果によっては、お客様がご利用のサイトのバージョンが変わったり、サイトにアクセスするユーザの属性に応じて、パーソナライズされたコンテンツが表示されるようになる場合があります。. Google Optimize プライバシー ポリシー
ClickTale
弊社は、弊社サイトをご利用になるお客様が、どこで操作につまづいたかを正しく理解できるよう、ClickTaleを利用しています。弊社ではセッションの記録を基に、ページの要素を含めて、お客様がサイトでどのような操作を行っているかを確認しています。お客様の特定につながる個人情報は非表示にし、収集も行いません。. ClickTale プライバシー ポリシー
OneSignal
弊社は、OneSignalがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、OneSignalを利用しています。広告には、OneSignalのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、OneSignalがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。OneSignalに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. OneSignal プライバシー ポリシー
Optimizely
弊社はOptimizelyを利用して、弊社サイトの新機能をテストし、お客様に合わせた方法で機能を使えるようにしています。そのため弊社では、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から、行動に関するデータを収集しています。収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID などが含まれます。機能のテストの結果によっては、お客様がご利用のサイトのバージョンが変わったり、サイトにアクセスするユーザの属性に応じて、パーソナライズされたコンテンツが表示されるようになる場合があります。. Optimizely プライバシー ポリシー
Amplitude
弊社はAmplitudeを利用して、弊社サイトの新機能をテストし、お客様に合わせた方法で機能を使えるようにしています。そのため弊社では、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から、行動に関するデータを収集しています。収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID などが含まれます。機能のテストの結果によっては、お客様がご利用のサイトのバージョンが変わったり、サイトにアクセスするユーザの属性に応じて、パーソナライズされたコンテンツが表示されるようになる場合があります。. Amplitude プライバシー ポリシー
Snowplow
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Snowplowを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Snowplow プライバシー ポリシー
UserVoice
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、UserVoiceを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. UserVoice プライバシー ポリシー
Clearbit
Clearbit を使用すると、リアルタイムのデータ強化により、お客様に合わせてパーソナライズされた適切なエクスペリエンスを提供できます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。Clearbit プライバシー ポリシー
YouTube
YouTube はビデオ共有プラットフォームで、埋め込まれたビデオを当社のウェブ サイトで表示および共有することができます。YouTube は、視聴者のビデオのパフォーマンスの測定値を提供しています。 YouTube 社のプライバシー ポリシー

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Adobe Analytics
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Adobe Analyticsを利用しています。収集する情報には、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Adobe Analytics プライバシー ポリシー
Google Analytics (Web Analytics)
弊社は、弊社サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集するために、Google Analytics (Web Analytics)を利用しています。データには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。このデータを基にサイトのパフォーマンスを測定したり、オンラインでの操作のしやすさを検証して機能強化に役立てています。併せて高度な解析手法を使用し、メールでのお問い合わせやカスタマー サポート、営業へのお問い合わせで、お客様に最適な体験が提供されるようにしています。. Google Analytics (Web Analytics) プライバシー ポリシー<>
Marketo
弊社は、お客様に関連性のあるコンテンツを、適切なタイミングにメールで配信できるよう、Marketoを利用しています。そのため、お客様のオンラインでの行動や、弊社からお送りするメールへの反応について、データを収集しています。収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、メールの開封率、クリックしたリンクなどが含まれます。このデータに、他の収集先から集めたデータを組み合わせ、営業やカスタマー サービスへの満足度を向上させるとともに、高度な解析処理によって、より関連性の高いコンテンツを提供するようにしています。. Marketo プライバシー ポリシー
Doubleclick
弊社は、Doubleclickがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Doubleclickを利用しています。広告には、Doubleclickのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Doubleclickがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Doubleclickに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Doubleclick プライバシー ポリシー
HubSpot
弊社は、お客様に関連性のあるコンテンツを、適切なタイミングにメールで配信できるよう、HubSpotを利用しています。そのため、お客様のオンラインでの行動や、弊社からお送りするメールへの反応について、データを収集しています。収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、メールの開封率、クリックしたリンクなどが含まれます。. HubSpot プライバシー ポリシー
Twitter
弊社は、Twitterがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Twitterを利用しています。広告には、Twitterのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Twitterがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Twitterに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Twitter プライバシー ポリシー
Facebook
弊社は、Facebookがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Facebookを利用しています。広告には、Facebookのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Facebookがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Facebookに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Facebook プライバシー ポリシー
LinkedIn
弊社は、LinkedInがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、LinkedInを利用しています。広告には、LinkedInのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、LinkedInがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。LinkedInに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. LinkedIn プライバシー ポリシー
Yahoo! Japan
弊社は、Yahoo! Japanがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Yahoo! Japanを利用しています。広告には、Yahoo! Japanのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Yahoo! Japanがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Yahoo! Japanに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Yahoo! Japan プライバシー ポリシー
Naver
弊社は、Naverがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Naverを利用しています。広告には、Naverのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Naverがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Naverに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Naver プライバシー ポリシー
Quantcast
弊社は、Quantcastがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Quantcastを利用しています。広告には、Quantcastのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Quantcastがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Quantcastに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Quantcast プライバシー ポリシー
Call Tracking
弊社は、キャンペーン用にカスタマイズした電話番号を提供するために、Call Trackingを利用しています。カスタマイズした電話番号を使用することで、お客様は弊社の担当者にすぐ連絡できるようになり、弊社はサービスのパフォーマンスをより正確に評価できるようになります。弊社では、提供した電話番号を基に、サイトでのお客様の行動に関するデータを収集する場合があります。. Call Tracking プライバシー ポリシー
Wunderkind
弊社は、Wunderkindがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Wunderkindを利用しています。広告には、Wunderkindのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Wunderkindがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Wunderkindに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Wunderkind プライバシー ポリシー
ADC Media
弊社は、ADC Mediaがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、ADC Mediaを利用しています。広告には、ADC Mediaのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、ADC Mediaがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。ADC Mediaに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. ADC Media プライバシー ポリシー
AgrantSEM
弊社は、AgrantSEMがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、AgrantSEMを利用しています。広告には、AgrantSEMのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、AgrantSEMがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。AgrantSEMに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. AgrantSEM プライバシー ポリシー
Bidtellect
弊社は、Bidtellectがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Bidtellectを利用しています。広告には、Bidtellectのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Bidtellectがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Bidtellectに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Bidtellect プライバシー ポリシー
Bing
弊社は、Bingがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Bingを利用しています。広告には、Bingのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Bingがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Bingに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Bing プライバシー ポリシー
G2Crowd
弊社は、G2Crowdがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、G2Crowdを利用しています。広告には、G2Crowdのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、G2Crowdがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。G2Crowdに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. G2Crowd プライバシー ポリシー
NMPI Display
弊社は、NMPI Displayがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、NMPI Displayを利用しています。広告には、NMPI Displayのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、NMPI Displayがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。NMPI Displayに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. NMPI Display プライバシー ポリシー
VK
弊社は、VKがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、VKを利用しています。広告には、VKのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、VKがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。VKに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. VK プライバシー ポリシー
Adobe Target
弊社はAdobe Targetを利用して、弊社サイトの新機能をテストし、お客様に合わせた方法で機能を使えるようにしています。そのため弊社では、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から、行動に関するデータを収集しています。収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID、お客様の Autodesk ID などが含まれます。機能のテストの結果によっては、お客様がご利用のサイトのバージョンが変わったり、サイトにアクセスするユーザの属性に応じて、パーソナライズされたコンテンツが表示されるようになる場合があります。. Adobe Target プライバシー ポリシー
Google Analytics (Advertising)
弊社は、Google Analytics (Advertising)がサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Google Analytics (Advertising)を利用しています。広告には、Google Analytics (Advertising)のデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Google Analytics (Advertising)がお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Google Analytics (Advertising)に提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Google Analytics (Advertising) プライバシー ポリシー
Trendkite
弊社は、Trendkiteがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Trendkiteを利用しています。広告には、Trendkiteのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Trendkiteがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Trendkiteに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Trendkite プライバシー ポリシー
Hotjar
弊社は、Hotjarがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Hotjarを利用しています。広告には、Hotjarのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Hotjarがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Hotjarに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Hotjar プライバシー ポリシー
6 Sense
弊社は、6 Senseがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、6 Senseを利用しています。広告には、6 Senseのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、6 Senseがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。6 Senseに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. 6 Sense プライバシー ポリシー
Terminus
弊社は、Terminusがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、Terminusを利用しています。広告には、Terminusのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、Terminusがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。Terminusに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. Terminus プライバシー ポリシー
StackAdapt
弊社は、StackAdaptがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、StackAdaptを利用しています。広告には、StackAdaptのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、StackAdaptがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。StackAdaptに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. StackAdapt プライバシー ポリシー
The Trade Desk
弊社は、The Trade Deskがサポートするサイトに広告を配置するために、The Trade Deskを利用しています。広告には、The Trade Deskのデータと、弊社サイトにアクセスしているお客様から弊社が収集する行動に関するデータの両方が使われます。弊社が収集するデータには、お客様がアクセスしたページ、ご利用中の体験版、再生したビデオ、購入した製品やサービス、お客様の IP アドレスまたはデバイスの ID が含まれます。この情報に併せて、The Trade Deskがお客様から収集したデータを使用する場合があります。The Trade Deskに提供しているデータを弊社が使用するのは、お客様のデジタル広告体験をより適切にカスタマイズし、関連性の高い広告をお客様に配信するためです。. The Trade Desk プライバシー ポリシー
RollWorks
We use RollWorks to deploy digital advertising on sites supported by RollWorks. Ads are based on both RollWorks data and behavioral data that we collect while you’re on our sites. The data we collect may include pages you’ve visited, trials you’ve initiated, videos you’ve played, purchases you’ve made, and your IP address or device ID. This information may be combined with data that RollWorks has collected from you. We use the data that we provide to RollWorks to better customize your digital advertising experience and present you with more relevant ads. RollWorks Privacy Policy

オンライン体験の品質向上にぜひご協力ください

オートデスクは、弊社の製品やサービスをご利用いただくお客様に、優れた体験を提供することを目指しています。これまでの画面の各項目で[はい]を選択したお客様については、弊社でデータを収集し、カスタマイズされた体験の提供とアプリケーションの品質向上に役立てさせていただきます。この設定は、プライバシー ステートメントにアクセスすると、いつでも変更できます。

お客様の顧客体験は、お客様が自由に決められます。

オートデスクはお客様のプライバシーを尊重します。オートデスクでは収集したデータを基に、お客様が弊社製品をどのように利用されているのか、お客様が関心を示しそうな情報は何か、オートデスクとの関係をより価値あるものにするには、どのような改善が可能かを理解するよう務めています。

そこで、お客様一人ひとりに合わせた体験を提供するために、お客様のデータを収集し、使用することを許可いただけるかどうかお答えください。

体験をカスタマイズすることのメリットにつきましては、本サイトのプライバシー設定の管理でご確認いただけます。弊社のプライバシー ステートメントでも、選択肢について詳しく説明しております。