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Autodesk EAGLE
EAGLE User Support (English) Best way to upgrade
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  • State Suggested Answer
  • Replies 25 replies
  • Answers 13 answers
  • Subscribers 178 subscribers
  • Views 2855 views
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Related

Best way to upgrade

jsantosrico
jsantosrico over 8 years ago

Hi,

 

The default behaviour of Eagle is to keep old versions of eagle when you update. Is not really a problem, as it is not hughe program, but it's a tad annoying when I click an old link pointing to an old version or I double click on a file and it opens in the old version because the file association has not updated. Why is this the default behaviour? I also noted that in my projects there is a file called Eagle.epf, which lists the libraries in use in my project, and the default libraries still point to old versions of them, as in for example:

 

....

UsedLibrary="C:/EAGLE-7.6.0/lbr/19inch.lbr"

UsedLibrary="C:/EAGLE-7.6.0/lbr/40xx.lbr"

UsedLibrary="C:/EAGLE-7.6.0/lbr/41xx.lbr"

UsedLibrary="C:/EAGLE-7.6.0/lbr/45xx.lbr"

....

 

Do I have to check all my projects every time I upgrade and update to the new paths? Is that the way this is intended to be? I was wondering if there is a less cumbersome way to update.

 

Thanks for taking the time to check my problem.

 

regards,

 

Joel

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  • rachaelp
    rachaelp over 6 years ago in reply to geralds +5 suggested
    geralds wrote: AD was or is extremely expensive with its software tools every time. ... Then you need a full version. Well, then the price shoots up like a rocket. I don't think EAGLE is particularly expensive…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 6 years ago in reply to geralds +5 suggested
    I really like EAGLE, and tried hard to see if I could work with the pricing model, since I wanted the engineers to get paid well. But, from a perception perspective alone, the model is quite bad for hobbyists…
  • geralds
    geralds over 6 years ago in reply to dougw +3 suggested
    Yes, it seems so. The licensing scheme is a blocking wall for many old-Eagle user. AD was or is extremely expensive with its software tools every time. With the free version of Eagle you can do everything…
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  • clem57
    0 clem57 over 6 years ago

    Eagle? Is it still in use?image

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  • dougw
    0 dougw over 6 years ago in reply to clem57

    Real numbers are hard to come by. The last numbers I saw indicate Eagle has a small market share by revenue numbers, but it has orders of magnitude more users than big names like Mentor, Cadence and Altium. (because of its decent free package) Presumably AutoCad is trying to convert all those users into paying customers with novel licensing schemes. Unfortunately they risk losing some of the user base in the process.

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  • geralds
    0 geralds over 6 years ago in reply to dougw

    Yes, it seems so.

    The licensing scheme is a blocking wall for many old-Eagle user.

    AD was or is extremely expensive with its software tools every time.

     

    With the free version of Eagle you can do everything with its functions which you can do with the premium version, but you have no adequate routing space on the PCB (80x100mm, with 2 signal layer).

    So, if you like mounting a "large" device, e.g. a 100 pin SMD IC with its components, the placing space will be overflow very quickly.

    Then you need a full version. Well, then the price shoots up like a rocket.

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  • rachaelp
    0 rachaelp over 6 years ago in reply to geralds

    geralds  wrote:

     

    AD was or is extremely expensive with its software tools every time.

     

    ...

     

    Then you need a full version. Well, then the price shoots up like a rocket.

     

    I don't think EAGLE is particularly expensive, If you do commercial work and want the standard version it's £114/year, if you need the premium version it's £600/year. For hobby work then it's possibly a bit steep for the premium version, but it was never free for the equivalents of these pre-subscription either. Compare the premium version to the likes of Mentor and Altium and you can get many seats for the cost of just one of the market leaders. Yes it doesn't do quite everything they do, but it's getting a lot closer. I understand why some people don't like the subscription but nobody can accuse Autodesk of creaming the profits from EAGLE and not putting the effort in to update the software, compare 9.5 to 7.6 (pre Autodesk) and it's night and day in terms of capability.

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  • geralds
    0 geralds over 6 years ago in reply to rachaelp

    Hi Rachael, rachaelp

    Yes, that's right and true.

    Many smaller companies may not use such CAD programs every day. So a subscription scheme, especially if you need several tools "at the same time", can quickly become expensive.Smaller companies may also have other offerings or services, so working alone with CAD programs can be costly rather than money-making.

    For me e.g., I also offer building of prototype modules, or programming of Microcontroller controlled modules. Then every day of the year is valuable considering Eagle-CAD.

     

    Yes, we remember what discussions we had here at E14 in the Autodesk Community back then.

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  • geralds
    0 geralds over 6 years ago in reply to rachaelp

    Hi Rachael, rachaelp

    Yes, that's right and true.

    Many smaller companies may not use such CAD programs every day. So a subscription scheme, especially if you need several tools "at the same time", can quickly become expensive.Smaller companies may also have other offerings or services, so working alone with CAD programs can be costly rather than money-making.

    For me e.g., I also offer building of prototype modules, or programming of Microcontroller controlled modules. Then every day of the year is valuable considering Eagle-CAD.

     

    Yes, we remember what discussions we had here at E14 in the Autodesk Community back then.

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