“Fusion 360 can now do print prep for several SLA printers,” orient, support, and “slice,” said Sualp Ozel, Senior Product Manager at Autodesk. Among these something 3D printing users will find very useful: Fusion 360 is now capable of slicing parts specifically to be produced via SLA and SLS processes. It is intended as a sort of “spring-cleaning update”, spanning from Cloud Credits becoming Flex Tokens, to new Drawings functionality, to a change in the Manufacture Workspace & Machining Extension, as well as a whole bunch of features graduating out of preview and becoming production-ready tools at your disposal. Included alongside the software are the instructions in PDF form and a short video demonstration of Slicer's features, taken from an official Autodesk "Quick Tips" blog post.The Fusion 360 March 2022 update, which Autodesk released yesterday, is one of the biggest of the year. The two zip archives were downloaded directly from the Autodesk site where the final build of Slicer was still available at the time of writing. Despite Fusion 360's continuing updates breaking the interoperability with Slicer, it still functions just fine as a stand-alone app for Windows and Mac OS. Sadly, Slicer for Fusion 360 was discontinued and all development ceased some years later. Released sometime in 2017 by Autodesk following the sunsetting of their similarly-scoped 123D tools, this software was originally meant to be an "app" or extension to their Fusion 360 CAD suite. This upload contains ZIP archives of the software's final build for Windows and Mac OS alongside the instructions and a short demonstration video.
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