Yea that is what I was thinking. My wife is a geologist and while she makes heavy use of ESRI GIS programs for mapping complex geology, faults, land slides etc. When it is time to do the cross sections she uses Adobe Illustrator. CAD seems good at representing very exact ideas it seems not as capable at representing ambiguity when representing ambiguity is needed.
However, I believe the professionals are moving away from paper but personally I am a clutz at illustrator like apps. Hmm and not much better with a white board. OK I mentioned a couple of proprietary programs so for the open source competition there is GRASS for GIS and there are at least a couple of illustrator like applications. GIS is geographical information system and is where your data has location information associated with it. So you shove your data into a database and then can plot the data out onto a map. There are also a number of other simulation and analysis packages you can run against the data. Steve M. DJ Delorie wrote: > Yeah, he says the problem is that for certain types of engineering > problems, the software just isn't flexible enough to properly deal > them. > > > _______________________________________________ > geda-user mailing list > geda-user@moria.seul.org > http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user > > _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list geda-user@moria.seul.org http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user