In the late 1990s and early 2000s, licensing and distribution rights for the Ashlar-Vellum engine led to several offshoots. , a German company, became the primary developer and distributor of the "DraftBoard" brand, tailoring it for European markets (hence the "DE" in "4.6 De Crack" often standing for the German localized version). The Legal Conflict
The history of this version is marked by a major legal dispute between and the Japanese distributor Concepts Technology Ltd. (which also managed DraftBoard releases). Draftboard Unlimited 4.6 De Crack
DraftBoard Unlimited was not an entirely new creation; it was a derivative of the famous software. Ashlar-Vellum was known for its "Drafting Assistant," a revolutionary interface that predicted geometry (like midpoints and intersections) in real-time, making it significantly more intuitive than competitors like AutoCAD at the time. The Split and POSH GmbH In the late 1990s and early 2000s, licensing