Note: Many of our articles have direct quotes from sources you can cite, within the Wikipedia article! This article doesn't yet, but we're working on it! See more info or our list of citable articles.
The purpose of this entry is to provide the history of this
organization.
AUGI is the Autodesk User Group International,
officially recognized by Autodesk as representing the Autodesk user
community. AUGI has two prime directives. The first is to assist
its members by presenting programs and information that will
enhance their use of Autodesk products. The second is to deliver
the voice of the user community to Autodesk, thus assisting
Autodesk in product development and giving users a say in the
process.
The group grew from a gathering of users at the
Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco, California as "NAAUG" (the North
American AutoCAD User Group) to worldwide connections as AUGI
(Autodesk User Group International) our members have driven changes
in technology, expansion of software features and user to user
connections in the design environment for AEC, Infrastructure and
Manufacturing.
Recounted here is information about how we got
started, what has been accomplished through the years, what the
struggles of the organization have been and who has guided our
expansion by serving on the Board of Directors.
With the
exception of the meticulous notes taken by our secretaries
(regarding motions, discussions, agenda items and votes at the
Board of Directors meetings), the History of the organization is
recorded here by the past presidents. We are grateful to the past
presidents that have served and recorded these milestones and
achievements
From a gathering of users at the Fairmont Hotel in
San Francisco, California as "NAAUG" (the North American AutoCAD
User Group) to worldwide connections as AUGI (Autodesk User Group
International) our members have driven changes in technology,
expansion of software features and user to user connections in the
design environment for AEC, Infrastructure and
Manufacturing.
1990: Mystery Meet/Meat
The North American
Autodesk User Group (NAAUG) was the original brainchild of John
Forbes, then a senior Autodesk representative. Before John became
an Autodesk employee, he had been a user of Autodesk software and
an Autodesk dealer; he knew that AutoCAD software users could
benefit greatly from sharing their knowledge and experience of the
software with one another. So, in 1989 he began planning the first
national meeting of AutoCAD users in San Jose, California, near
Autodesk's headquarters in Sausalito.
The meeting was held at a
fine hotel, the Fairmont, where most of the attending users stayed
and attended all of the organization's meetings and meals (provided
by Autodesk). The food was so fancy that few recognized what it
was...folks still laugh about the "mutant bran muffins" served at
breakfast (I think my digestive track is still processing the one I
had) and the "mystery meat" served at lunch the first day of the
conference. I will never forget the first open forum session held
in the main meeting room. There were 700 people in attendance that
year, all of whom were anxious to find out who in the room had
answers to their questions. The mood of the event on its first day
had been cautious and perhaps overly professional; suits and ties
were everywhere. It wasn't until the general forum session that I
remember things relaxing. At one point, attendee Gale Gorman, of
the Las Vegas AutoCAD User Group, got up to the microphone and
asked if anyone else in the room was a user of AutoCAD for Xenix.
Not a peep was made for almost 10 seconds; the whole room broke
into laughter and someone shouted, "So you're the guy who bought
AutoCAD for XENIX!" From that moment on, the whole event seemed
more casual, and less intimidating.
These first days of NAAUG
were exceptional in that the founders and programmers of Autodesk
attended the meetings. One could actually talk, one-on-one, with
people who had complete control over the code's future. This was a
remarkable opportunity at the time, and people who attended this
gathering saw the immediate results of their requests in the next
version of AutoCAD. Users discovered that their opinions,
expertise, war stories and wish lists mattered to Autodesk, and
that NAAUG was the vehicle which made this possible. Autodesk also
took this meeting seriously, making sure that users were given
every opportunity to express their concerns, and to let them know
that their input was valuable to the future of AutoCAD.
Highlights of the meet included a wonderful presentation by
Joel Orr on his vision of future interfaces, from screens to
keyboards, from GUIs to CAD programs. His predictions were
remarkably accurate given what has happened seven years later. The
first Board of Directors was voted into office, and the first
Bylaws were voted into place. I don't think most people realize how
much effort the first Board of Directors poured into the first
draft of the Bylaws. It was a tremendous amount of work and we
remain grateful to this administration for getting NAAUG on its
feet.
Autodesk gave a presentation on the latest version of
AutoCAD, and then everyone was split into discipline-specific
groups so that educators could meet educators, architects could
meet architects, and so on. Thus began the first Special Interest
Groups (SIGs). The whole show was a great success, and users from
around the country also found time to relax in the evenings and
make new friends. Some of these after-hours sessions were just as
productive as anything planned during the day. People went home
completely enthused about this new idea of networking with other
AutoCAD users, and having direct contact with Autodesk.
The
1991 Board of Directors were:
President: John McQuary / Fluor
Daniel President-Elect: Jay Reinhardt / Bechtel Corp. Secretary:
Norm Ruddock / Compaq Treasurer: Craig Allen / Chevron Information
Technology Co. LUG Representative: Phil Kreiker / Looking Glass
Microproducts AEC SIG Chair: Tom Conti / Walt Disney
Imagineering Mechanical SIG Chair: Dan Schlig / Harris Corp. GIS
SIG Chair: Mike McGrath / Delaware Dept. of Agriculture Senior
Autodesk Rep: John Forbes / Autodesk Manager of User Group
Services: Kathy Clinton / Autodesk