“Just run MDSolids.” “But I have a MacBook.” “Oh. Um... have you tried Boot Camp?” 😩
Using Wine or the paid CrossOver app, some users have gotten MDSolids (specifically version 1.5.5) running without a full Windows install. It’s not 100% stable (random font glitches, occasional crashes during Mohr’s circle), but for a quick homework check? It works. Mdsolids For Mac
For the uninitiated, is that legendary Windows-only educational software for Mechanics of Materials. It’s the Swiss Army knife for beam deflection, column buckling, stress transformation, and section properties. It’s the tool professors swear by because it shows step-by-step solutions —not just answers. “Just run MDSolids
Here’s an interesting, engaging post tailored for engineering students or educators who use macOS and struggle with finding good mechanics of materials software. 🍎 MDSolids on Mac: The Quest for the Holy Grail of Beam Bending It’s not 100% stable (random font glitches, occasional
Let’s be real. If you’re an engineering student (or a professor) on a Mac, you’ve probably had this exact conversation:
But for Mac users? It’s been a 15-year game of digital Tetris. Here’s the good news, Mac faithful: You have options now —none are perfect, but some are surprisingly elegant.
Run Windows 11 ARM on an M1/M2/M3 Mac via Parallels Desktop. MDSolids flies in this environment. Downside? Parallels costs $$ and you need a Windows license. But if you’re a civil/mech engineering major, it’s probably worth it.