Skip to main content
October 16, 2013
Question

PTC call for presentations...

  • October 16, 2013
  • 2 replies
  • 745 views
So the 2014 PTC World call for presentations no longer lists Arbortext (or IsoDraw) as a PTC product.

So has PTC spun the entire service management side of things off to another BU? Is there any compelling reason to attend PTC World? Is there still an intent to have a separate service event?

So many questions...

    2 replies

    1-Visitor
    October 17, 2013
    There was pretty much zero *technical *content **appropriate for Arbortext
    developers, customizers, power users, etc. last year in Anaheim at
    *either*PTC conference. Further, there was a great deal of confusion
    prior to the
    conference*s* (remember there was a separate show for the service stuff,
    which is theoretically where Arbortext lives, but all of that content was
    at the management level). At one of the dinners (or maybe it was a lunch)
    Anica expressed an interest in addressing that this year.

    Anica, what is going to happen this year to solicit expert customer /
    developer sessions at any of the various conferences / venues associated
    with PTC Live Global 2014?




    On Wed, Oct 16, 2013 at 10:17 AM, Buss, Jason A
    <jabuss@cessna.textron.com>wrote:

    > So the 2014 PTC World call for presentations no longer lists Arbortext
    > (or IsoDraw) as a PTC product.****
    >
    > ** **
    >
    > So has PTC spun the entire service management side of things off to
    > another BU? Is there any compelling reason to attend PTC World? Is there
    > still an intent to have a separate service event?****
    >
    > ** **
    >
    > So many questions…****
    >
    1-Visitor
    October 18, 2013
    It's unlikely that many companies using Arbortext Editor will pay to send any employees to this conference, based on past content and reviews like this. My business area has stopped sending anyone for the last few years, due to the ever-decreasing Arbortext content. Now it looks like the content is not just ever-decreasing, but totally gone.