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Onshape history?
Just out of curiosity, when was Onshape born?
I mean the date when it was first time online or some other milestone that you keep as the birth date?
When did you know it's actually becoming something more than great idea?
Was there some major steps to overcome before being sure that it is possible to build cloud cad system?
@jon_hirschtick
I mean the date when it was first time online or some other milestone that you keep as the birth date?
When did you know it's actually becoming something more than great idea?
Was there some major steps to overcome before being sure that it is possible to build cloud cad system?
@jon_hirschtick
//rami
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Twitter: @onshapetricks & @babart1977
2014-07-09T01:57:58.929Z (this is the very first database entry). Our early "alpha" users, like Bruce, were given accounts later that summer.
Onshape opened up for public beta in March of 2015 and went to "general release" in December 2015.
How did you hear about Onshape?
I came in a bit later in March 2015 and it was just googling around to find alternative for Alibre (Geomagic at that time) since 3Dsystems pretty effectively burried that fine piece of software.. I had to request for account but Onshape already looked good and there was basic functionality to start modeling.
If you mean it was the seventh september in american date code, then it is exactly my birthday.
Our company, originally and temporarily called "Belmont Technology", was founded Nov 1, 2012. This was truly a "cold start" -- we had no prototype, no business plan. Just a group of six great people (Michael Lauer, Dave Corcoran, John McEleney, Scott Harris, Tommy Li and me).
I think we quickly knew the potential value of our system based on visiting users and hearing about the problems they were having with traditional installed CAD and file-based data sharing and management -- you state these problems better than we do!
A top priority from day one was assembling the Onshape *team*. Hiring some amazing people that have made Onshape what it is. You know many of them from here in the Forum plus there are many others you do not hear as much about.
We also set out to raise the investment capital we knew would need. We were lucky to find quality venture capital investors who shared our vision for the future of CAD and how we could someday improve the way every product gets designed.
Our team and capital were and are both critical building blocks for us.
We all *believed* the Onshape we imagined was build-able, but there was no *proof* yet since nobody had ever built a system like Onshape before (true web app, no install, mobile, real-time collaboration, etc -- yet with performance and pro-level function). Many people in the CAD industry thought a system like Onshape would not be possible to build. They were of course wrong!
Our great team proved out the concepts and feasibility of Onshape, or "BelCAD" as it was known early in our life, through many development projects, prototypes, white board designs, etc. Along the way proving out how we could be interactive, performant, collaborative, use FeatureScript ("BelScript"), Part Studios, Tabs, Versions, upgrades, reliable/fault tolerant, secure, run on mobile, etc. We laid out the visions for someday having Release Management, Enterprise, etc. The team thought about how to make things scalable to support very large numbers of users reliably.
We also thought a lot about the design of Onshape. We wanted a system that would feel familiar enough to existing CAD users so they could learn it, yet could also be a cleaner and more productive design that would fit well into the current and future world of users' computing experiences that are informed so much by web and mobile. To implement better CAD ideas, but not alienate users' existing senses of CAD.
And of course a lot of feedback on early prototypes came from users! We did User Experience testing from inception.
Honestly looking back it felt like we had not only an *opportunity* to build Onshape, but also in some sense an *obligation* to build Onshape. Building a system like ours took a clarity of vision plus considerable team and financial capital. We felt someone, us, had to take a shot at asking what-could-be and then building it.
And from the earliest days to now and continuing into the future the greatest reward for us are you, our users, and the products you build in Onshape.
Thank you to all of you -- you have helped us so so much in building what we have, and I am certain will continue to help and drive us ever-forward into the future.
HWM-Water Ltd