From DDC2020 PANEL: Additive in the Next Economy - Insights from the Top, Hosted by Carl Bass · · Dyndrite
“I think the idea of somehow modeling for additive in the old software is really very difficult. You see this all the time when there's a new technology that comes online, people tend to make the old thing just like the new one. Like it used to be funny when carbon fiber and other composites first came on and what I see is people using their old designs that were made for things like aluminum and making a carbon fiber and you're looking to go that's just black aluminum.”
On , Carl Bass, Former President & Chief Executive Officer at Autodesk, spoke about CAD software during DDC2020 PANEL: Additive in the Next Economy - Insights from the Top, Hosted by Carl Bass on Dyndrite.
In two recent podcast appearances, former Autodesk CEO Carl Bass discussed the company's history, his departure and return, and his views on current technology trends. He recounted Autodesk's founding, noting that the company's name stood for "automated desktop" and that early AutoCAD was initially considered only suitable for small buildings, though it was later used on the Freedom Tower. Bass described being fired by then-CEO Carol Bartz in the 1990s after telling her the company was "a messed up place," only to return three years later when Autodesk acquired his startup, Buzzsaw. He served as COO and later CEO until around 2016. Bass characterized the transition to subscription licensing as "not that much fun" during the change but said it became "financially very beneficial." Bass offered several strong opinions on current technology. He said he believes "there is no reason" for 2D drawings in 2026 and that those who still use them "should be shot in the head." He stated that "the vast majority of money invested in AI will be lost" but predicted it will produce "dozens of very valuable companies," comparing the situation to the dot-com boom. Bass expressed skepticism about humanoid robots, saying he "would absolutely never" design one from scratch, and criticized efforts to achieve full self-driving without lidar or radar, calling it "a bad idea." He described machine learning as "the biggest change I've seen in my lifetime," on par with the internet and the PC.