Cs98 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2023, 15:53
But he's not a student. And the student pricing is not reflective of the advanced nature of the program (for the reasons I outlined earlier). He will have to pay (or rather Merc will have to pay) full price, which is in the 10s of thousands for a license
How do you know he isn't a a part time student and what precludes him from learning more and experimenting to further his own personal growth outside of work? Maybe he takes advantage of his Cranfield university pass, because he doesn't want to pay top rate?
As the comparison of a multi million dollar hypercar project with direct F1 tech transfer, to a guy who has a hobby of creating surface design models is abhorrent conflation.
It should also be noted, he was using this software since 2019 preceding his employment at Mercedes
He has a clear and defined hobby of creating surface design cad models that utilises CATIA.
Here's some of his ideas dating back to 2019.
https://grabcad.com/library/thunderbird-1-2
It's literally all there if anyone can be bothered with the tiniest bit of referencing.
Cs98 wrote: ↑17 Aug 2023, 15:53
However, the rapid advancement of computing is not an argument in your favour. It just goes to show anyone with a skill-set, a CAD program, and a fast computer can do work from anywhere.
An Apple A16 bionic can be configured to do some crazy stuff. The A17 will double this according to geekbench(jury's out on that). So we could have reach the point where anyone in a technical role in F1 won't be allowed a PC or a new smart phone.
Of course this goes to show how utterly unreasonable it is to compare something like Mr Vella, with timestamped history of what he does, to Project RB17.