Mira laughed. “Sure, Dad. And the Sistine Chapel is ‘some paint on a ceiling.’”
She opened a blank sketch, drew a single circle, and extruded it into a cylinder.
The real work had just begun.
The official page loaded cleanly: a deep navy background, a 3D model of a gear rotating in slow motion, and the words: “For students, educators, and hobbyists—free for 3 years.”
She typed slowly: .
She saved the file: CatPaw_v1.f3d .
The download finished. She double-clicked the installer. A window appeared: “Autodesk Fusion 360 Installer – Do you want to allow this app to make changes?” autodesk fusion 360 download
The search engine obeyed. Page one was a battlefield of sponsored ads—“Get Fusion 360 Now!”—and fake “Pro” versions promising cracked licenses. Mira ignored them. She’d learned the hard way last month, when a sketchy .exe had turned her science project into a ransom note.