![]() One thing is for sure, anyone with a doggy Internet connection is not going to enjoy using Circuit Maker (we’re hoping they remove that limitation in the final product). Will that be a deal killer for the OSHW community? We’ll find out soon enough. You do get two “Sandbox” designs that you can hide from the world before you generate your gerber files, but after that, your project is online for the whole world to see. ![]() It won’t work without an Internet connection, there is no local storage, and it forces you to share your projects with the world. The software uses cloud based storage for your project files, and is community based. So by now you’re thinking to yourself “OK, what’s the catch?” Well there are a few gotchas – but only a few. Altium was going have board size and layer limits, with the ability to “upgrade” at a cost. This is a major departure from the pre-beta we covered back in September. And if that isn’t enough, the “engine” seems to be the exact same back-end that is used in the full $10,000 Altium Designer as well(with a bit easier to use user interface on top). They’ve thrown in almost everything under the sun a 3D viewer, team project collaboration, EagleCAD and DFX import, integrated Octopart supplier and pricing information, no commercial usage limits, and project sharing. And this isn’t some stripped-down, bare-bones software here. Unlimited board size, and unlimited layers – all free. This week, Altium launched the open public beta for its new Circuit Maker software, and it’s a major change from what we looked at previously. Things are about to get interesting in the world of PCB design software for the open source hardware community.
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