Welcome to the Revit Clinic. My Name is Harlan Brumm and I am the Global Technical Lead – Revit for Autodesk Product Support and I will be the primary contributor to this blog.
A little bit about me:
I am 26 years old, married, and live, work, and play in New Hampshire and New England. I’m originally from Wisconsin and am a big Green Bay Packer Fan (Don’t ask about the New York Jets and Brett Favre). I worked in the AEC industry (both Civil and Architectural) prior to joining Autodesk, but technology and CAD and BIM has always been my passion.
My daily focus is making sure that our Product Support staff has the highest level of technical knowledge so that they can resolve any problem.
In my spare time I teach AutoCAD and Revit at the Boston Architectural College and enjoy technology and sports (and really anything related to those two things)
About this blog, its name and purpose:
Where do you go when you have a physical problem?, A Doctor. Where do you go when you have a BIM problem? Well, I’m not a doctor, but I hope that you will start to come here. I will be focusing this blog on the Autodesk Revit platform of Products, Revit Architecture, Structure, and MEP and trying to prevent BIM problems and provide you rehab if they happen.
I have to admit, I won’t always know the answer to your problem. I am more of a generalist, like your family physician, but like a good generalist, I know who to send you to, so I may refer you to a specialists or I may even recommend another hospital (blog or web site).
There will be others who contribute to this blog along the way. Think of them as the other doctors, radiologists, or therapists that can help provide you the care you need.
The goal of this blog is provide what a good clinic provides. I want to prevent problems from occurring, and provide rehab if they do. In case of emergency you can always break the glass and contact your Autodesk reseller or Autodesk Product Support, but the goal of this blog is to prevent those emergencies from occurring.
Think of us as your neighborhood clinic, walk in, ask a question, and let us make you well.
when is the timeout bug going to be fixed in Revit 2010?
at the moment we are unable to take advantage of one of the key network license benefits i.e. we are unable to activate the timeout function as this prevents Revit 2010 from been able to save.
Posted by: mark | November 17, 2009 at 12:51 AM