Not only has it become a tool of choice for 3D printing enthusiasts, it’s been used to design the printers themselves, helping to kick off a broader revolution in personal manufacturing. It has also been used to launch ocean cleaning drones. We found that SketchUp has been used to plan structures at Burning Man. While there are certainly communities of folks who still use SketchUp as a “geo-modeling” tool for Google Earth, the reality is that that this kind of use has only ever represented a small subset of all the things people are actually doing with it.
Read that again if you need minute for it to sink in… SketchUp is used almost a billion times a year. Today more than 30 million people a year use SketchUp in a dozen different languages, at a rate of almost 40 starts per second. In the past six years or so, its user base has grown into the millions and spread around the world.
#Sketchup make 2013 free how to#
This new version of SketchUp cost nothing to use-and because SketchUp is SketchUp-anyone could learn how to do so in almost no time at all.Īs most folks probably now know, the free version of SketchUp has been a huge success. One of the biggest features we added was actually something we took away… the price tag.
In 2006, just a few weeks after we closed our original acquisition by Google, we introduced a slimmed-down new version of SketchUp that allowed people to quickly and easily build 3D models of the buildings that mattered to them for representation in Earth.