Although May threw for 137 yards and two touchdowns, the Pioneers could not overcome the explosive Linfield offense who torched them for 436 yards of total offense. The Pioneers fared worse against Linfield, who are ranked 8th among Division III teams. The interceptions were his first of the season and his collegiate career. May could not continue his high level of play from earlier in the season, passing for 203 yards, one touchdown, two interceptions and completing 17 out of 44 of his passes. Heisman Hosoda ’20 scored from 36 yards out for his third straight game with a touchdown on a pass from Sawyer May ’21 in the 4th quarter. The Pioneer defense forced a turnover in every game since Nov. The UPS Logger defense forced four costly turnovers which led to the Pioneers being out-gained 485-246 yards over the course of the game. UPS scored all of their 35 points in the first half and were up 35-3 at halftime. The Pios lost to UPS 35-13 and to Linfield 49-14. I cannot see my previous reply so I ma posting this again.Ī quick question, are you developing the software for your needs or your customers needs.The Lewis & Clark football team had a tough few weeks in their schedule, facing a resilient University of Puget Sound (UPS) team on Oct. Some of your paying customers have asked you for a feature that many feel they would find useful including myself. It may not suit the way you work but don't your customers needs and satisfaction count for anything?ĭisplaying the coordinates on screen would take up little room and I am sure that internally the software knows or could very easily be aware of the coordinates of the mouse position. They have given you an examples of why they feel it would benefit them and your response is that they use dimensions for example. Your response is that they need to think differently, maybe you could think differently in this case and be a bit more flexible. Creating dimensions can't be as quick and as useful as a quick glance of the on screen coordinates in all cases. You can precisely position things without knowing the coordinates I feel that paying customers and their receiving their money should be seen as a privilege and not a right and doing what you can to provide greater satisfaction should count for something.ĭo you feel it would detract from the software or user experience of you displayed the coordinates of the mouse on need to think differently in Fusion (or any other modern parametric CAD system). If this is true, then why is there an origin point in the workspace? Why is there a visible grid? Why is there any visual representation of dimension outside the models at all? Surely, there is no need for absolute position reference if knowledge of absolute positioning isn't required. The answer, of course, is that Fusion DOES keep track of absolute position, but intentionally hides it from end users because of an arrogant, stubborn, antagonistic policy designed to funnel workflow methods into a static process defined by Autodesk developers, not by real world users. I'd go so far, based on the tone of the official responses, to say that it's an intentional lie. The latest position of the mouse can be accessed using the GetMouseCoordinates() method of the ScottPlot control. There are MANY MANY workflows that would benefit from the end user's knowledge of absolute positioning. Not the least of which is creating new objects from real-world measurements where certain absolute measurements are known but internal relational measurements are not. ![]() The fact that this is so widely requested shows that this is true in actual practice, despite the theoretical suggestions by Autodesk to the contrary. It will not break Fusion to display this known value. But it will absolutely break business relationships with customers if Autodesk continues to treat these simple requests with such a flippant and arrogant attitude.
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