Think of it like this - when an artist paints something, they often start with the big features first. Thank you for everyone's time and great support.Ĭlick to expand.That is roughly true, though I think the term "color" here, while accurate, is perhaps misleading. Sorry for my English, I use a translator. Because now it seems to me that you are developing pretty fast.īut please don't take this as a request (for the next version ), rather as a thank you for the work of you and the whole development team. And maybe I will upgrade next year (I assume there will be another version of Alibre). However, I've been thinking about it lately. That's why I haven't upgraded to a better workstation yet. Except for some small exceptions (when working for a long time without closing the application). And Alibre works quite well on it so far. The station has 16 GB RAM and an Intel Core I7 processor. Maybe that's the problem why this feature can't be turned on now. I am using an older workstation that uses an NVIDIA Quadro K1100M card. I have an NVIDIA graphics card, but I can't turn this option on. Now after your reply I understand that I would have to use different materials (transparent) to make it clearly obvious. I was just surprised that there is no visible difference between the images when I use higher number of samples. As I wrote above due to the advice of people here on the forum and a short study on the internet the pictures already look pretty good.
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