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Maya was an architectural student, and she had a problem. Her studio project was a modern art museum with a stunning, swooping concrete roof. In her mind, it looked like a ribbon floating in the air. But in SketchUp, it looked like a pile of broken cardboard boxes.
The Flat Roof That Needed Curves
She had drawn the complex shape using organic curves and imported topography. But when she tried to give it thickness—to turn her paper-thin surface into a real 3D slab of concrete—SketchUp’s standard tool refused to work. --- Joint Push Pull Sketchup Plugin Download
She added walls, windows, and a foundation. Her museum looked professional, realistic, and ready for 3D printing or rendering.
Maya remembered her professor’s warning: "Never download plugins from random websites. They carry malware like viruses and ransomware."
In half a second, her flat, invalid surface became a beautiful, solid, 3D-concrete roof with perfect, even thickness. No errors. No broken geometry. In her mind, it looked like a ribbon floating in the air
She avoided the shady sites offering "FREE Joint Push Pull 2025 FULL CRACK."
Every time she clicked on a curved face, SketchUp gave her the same error: “Cannot extrude curved or triangulated surfaces.” Her beautifully wavy roof remained a flat, useless shell.
She learned that Joint Push Pull (JPP) is a legendary extension created by Fredo6, a famous SketchUp plugin developer. Unlike the standard tool, JPP doesn't just push flat rectangles. It can push any face—curved, bumpy, vertical, or twisted—outward or inward to create a solid, real-world thickness. But when she tried to give it thickness—to
With the plugin installed, Maya selected her wavy roof surface. She clicked the icon (a blue arrow pushing a curved face). She chose Normal mode, typed 6 inches (the thickness of concrete), and clicked.
Frustrated, Maya opened her browser and typed:
The first results were sketchy forum links and YouTube videos with robotic voices. Then she saw a name repeated over and over: .
| Version | 2.0.5 |
|---|---|
| Last Updated | July 08, 2025 |
| Operating System | Windows 7 SP1, 8, 8.1, 10, 11 (32 & 64-bit) |
| Server Version | Windows Server 2016, 2019, 2022 (32 & 64-bit) |
| Category | Malware Prevention Tool |
| License Type | Shareware |
| Setup File Size | ~50 MB |
| Install Size | ~40 MB |
The installation is very simple: open the Downloads folder and double-click on the setup file,
click Yes on User Account Control window, then accept the EULA and
click the Next
button to install the program. Once OSArmor has been successfully installed,
you will see its icon in
the Desktop and in the system tray.
After you have installed OSArmor, open the GUI (right-click in the system tray icon and
select Show/Hide Window)
then click on the top-menu Help -> License Status. Now the Activator GUI
will be shown, here just enter your license key
and click the Activate button. Make sure
you have an Internet connection active.
Have questions? Don't hesitate to contact us directly via email.
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