Athenas es una cantante católica de Argentina, nominada al Grammy Latino en 2022. Ella está dedicada a la Nueva Evangelización a través de distintas producciones musicales, audiovisuales, y presentaciones en vivo para llevar a todos, especialmente a los jóvenes, la Buena Noticia y al encuentro con Jesús.
Sigue conociendo a Athenas en sus redes sociales:
SketchUp Version 6 (released in 2007) introduced several key features that were significant at the time, bridging the gap between the earlier Google-acquisition era and more advanced modeling tools. Here are its standout features:
A niche, beloved feature: In SketchUp 6’s Section Planes, you could fill the cut face with a solid color. In modern versions, this requires a style edit or a plugin. In Version 6, it was a simple right-click checkbox.
Components (reusable objects) got a major upgrade. Version 6 introduced dynamic components in a primitive form—specifically the "Component Browser" got faster, and you could now easily replace one component with another without breaking the model. For landscape architects building trees, this was a lifesaver.
Many legacy CNC machines run on controllers that only accept old file formats. SketchUp 6 exports native .SKP files that are easily converted to .STL or .DXF via old plugins that no longer work in modern "Subscription" versions. Hobbyist cabinet makers keep a Windows 7 VM running just for SketchUp 6.
SketchUp 6 introduced the rainbow-colored inferencing lines (Red for X, Green for Y, Blue for Z) that responded with emotional intelligence. The "On Face" and "Inferred" helpers were sticky and accurate. For technical modelers, Version 6’s inference engine was less "twitchy" than modern versions, which often over-autocomplete based on large datasets.
Visual Idea: A split screen. Left side: A complex modern render. Right side: A wireframe model from SketchUp 6.
Caption: Remember when SketchUp was owned by Google? 🕰️
Version 6 (2007) was built for one thing: Speed. ✅ No subscription (One-time purchase). ✅ Ran on a netbook. ✅ Direct upload to Google Earth.
The downside? No solid tools (you had to manually clean up messy geometry) and no default PBR textures.
Was SketchUp 6 the peak of "simple" 3D? Or do you prefer the modern extensions?
#SketchUp6 #RetroCAD #GoogleEarth #3DModeling #NostalgiaTech
SketchUp Version 6 (released in 2007) introduced several key features that were significant at the time, bridging the gap between the earlier Google-acquisition era and more advanced modeling tools. Here are its standout features:
A niche, beloved feature: In SketchUp 6’s Section Planes, you could fill the cut face with a solid color. In modern versions, this requires a style edit or a plugin. In Version 6, it was a simple right-click checkbox.
Components (reusable objects) got a major upgrade. Version 6 introduced dynamic components in a primitive form—specifically the "Component Browser" got faster, and you could now easily replace one component with another without breaking the model. For landscape architects building trees, this was a lifesaver. sketchup version 6
Many legacy CNC machines run on controllers that only accept old file formats. SketchUp 6 exports native .SKP files that are easily converted to .STL or .DXF via old plugins that no longer work in modern "Subscription" versions. Hobbyist cabinet makers keep a Windows 7 VM running just for SketchUp 6.
SketchUp 6 introduced the rainbow-colored inferencing lines (Red for X, Green for Y, Blue for Z) that responded with emotional intelligence. The "On Face" and "Inferred" helpers were sticky and accurate. For technical modelers, Version 6’s inference engine was less "twitchy" than modern versions, which often over-autocomplete based on large datasets. SketchUp Version 6 (released in 2007) introduced several
Visual Idea: A split screen. Left side: A complex modern render. Right side: A wireframe model from SketchUp 6.
Caption: Remember when SketchUp was owned by Google? 🕰️ SketchUp 6 was available in two main editions:
Version 6 (2007) was built for one thing: Speed. ✅ No subscription (One-time purchase). ✅ Ran on a netbook. ✅ Direct upload to Google Earth.
The downside? No solid tools (you had to manually clean up messy geometry) and no default PBR textures.
Was SketchUp 6 the peak of "simple" 3D? Or do you prefer the modern extensions?
#SketchUp6 #RetroCAD #GoogleEarth #3DModeling #NostalgiaTech