| > I mean I'll be honest, it's still a car crash of a program I'm glad you said that so I feel a little less mean... I gave it another try but it still feels pretty dire. FPS is bad on a macbook pro with a 120Hz screen on simple models and sketches. I explicitly selected "touchpad" as the navigation scheme, but I still can't figure out how to rotate, and even figuring out panning took me longer than almost every other 3D program out there (blender, PrusaSlicer, macos quick look STL viewer, solvespace). It still has a splash screen and takes quite a long time to load, like an application from the 90s. Buttons and actions that are completely irrelevant to me are shown, but disabled, which gives a really cluttered feel. There's still "part design" and "part" benches. No idea what distinction is being drawn there. Obviously part of this is from me being inexperienced with the tool, but as a new user all these issues add up to something that doesn't feel approachable or enjoyable to use. Solvespace has its own issues, but at least it opens instantly and is generally a joy to use. I'll watch some others slog through FreeCAD 1.1 though so I don't have to, and maybe I'll learn something. |
The base UI is quite bad but there are ways to improve it - either through settings and better organisation [0] or via plugins.
I’d suggest to watch a couple of tutorials specifically on 1.1 ([1] was my entry point) as every CAD program had quirks and frustrations at first. I’d say that for hobby-level creations, 1.1 now has ~80% of the usability of Solidworks, once you figure out how.
I’m not sure what’s going on with the performance on your system; I’ve used various 1.1 versions on a Windows laptop and a MacBook Pro and they’re both sufficiently performant. (I usually use a development or RC build from GitHub [2])
[0] https://youtu.be/LKq7hgbu7ks
[1] https://youtu.be/VEfNRST_3x8
[2] https://github.com/FreeCAD/FreeCAD/releases