amishmafia,
I'm certain I'm not the only person to ever say this, but... "The best CAM program is the one you know". Same goes for CAD.
Yes, if you're in the habit of entering circle center *first* to position a circle, then Fusion will feel clumsy. But just like any other program that is new to any of us -- there is never an overnight adaptation.
I dove into Fusion 360 a few years ago when I "semi-retired" and had time, so I just forced myself to use it, and nothing else. The sketch-based, parametric modeling felt incredibly confining at first (I came from a CAD program that I had used for over 20 years), but now I can design parts/assemblies and generate code in Fusion very quickly... as fast or faster than I've been able to in any other program. Is that because Fusion 360 is better? Not at all. I've just become fairly decent at the parts of it that I use.
I do like their business model though: very inexpensive, constant improvements, and great file translation (because all the translators are very up-to-date and run in their cloud). Additionally, because it's free to use for most hobbyists, the quantity of people contributing "how-to" videos is almost endless. Autodesk has, IMO, done something a bit unique in that they have "enabled" thousands of users to become "tech support contributors". Struggling to do something in Fusion? An answer (or 20 answers) can probably be found on YouTube with a 15-second search. Need a fast answer on how to do something in NX, or Catia?... good luck.
The above is not a sales pitch, it's simply why *I* dumped everything else and started using Fusion. Comfortable with Rhino (or some other program), and don't want to learn something different? Stay with what works -- that's never a bad choice, and keeps you up and running *now*.
Oh.. and fwiw: Fusion 360 now
finally has "user configurable shortcut keys", which is really nice.
PM