Fast & precise
Move rooms and symbols with mouse or set their sizes and distances numerically when high precision is required.
Multi-platform
Use your mobile device on location and complete the work on your computer at the office.
3D mode
See your project in 3D, as many floors as you need. Camera can be freely positioned.
Create detailed and precise floor plans. See them in 3D or print to scale. Add furniture to design interior of your home. Have your floor plan with you while shopping to check if there is enough room for a new furniture.
Here’s an interesting, engaging review for Abbott Elementary Season 1, Episode 13 (“Student Transfer”), based on the release (high-bitrate video, likely part of a Blu-ray remux or full disc backup). Review: “Abbott Elementary S01E13 BDMV” – A Season Finale That Shines in Pristine Quality The Episode: “Student Transfer” (S01E13) The Format: BDMV (Blu-ray Disc Movie / Uncompressed Backup) Verdict: A masterclass in cringe-comedy payoff, now looking and sounding better than its broadcast or streaming versions. Why This BDMV Matters Let’s be honest: Abbott Elementary is shot as a “mockumentary” with handheld, natural lighting. On streaming, compression artifacts can muddy the warm, slightly desaturated Philly classroom tones. But in BDMV form —direct from Blu-ray, no re-encoding—you get the full AVC video bitrate (often 25–35 Mbps). The result? The school’s faded posters, Janine’s thrift-store cardigans, and Ava’s leopard-print disasters have texture . You can see the grain in the gymnasium’s old wooden floors. It’s oddly beautiful. The Episode Itself This season finale hinges on a deceptively simple plot: a promising student (Mia) might transfer to a wealthier charter school. Janine (Quinta Brunson) goes full overdrive trying to keep her, while Ava does… Ava things.
If you already have the Blu-ray or a full disc backup, watch this episode with good headphones. Listen to the chalk screech. Look at the peeling paint. That’s the point. abbott elementary s01e13 bdmv
★★★★½ (half star off because the DTS track won’t make your subwoofer break a sweat—it’s a comedy, not Dune ). On streaming, compression artifacts can muddy the warm,