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i have a problem with using autocad. when I open a project autocad starts a menu with proxy information. in this menu I have the choose: Do not show proxy graphics, show proxy graphics, show proxy bounding box. which of the choose I make the menu disapear and autocad start. the only problem is when it starts autocad shows noting on the screen. I only get a gray window see photo.
And your teacher offered what type of help or suggestion?
If you can't get help there, try these:
Set PROXYSHOW variable to 1 (that's a one)
Set PROXYNOTICE variable to 0 (that's a zero)
Set PROXYGRAPHICS variable to 1 (that's a one).
You will need to type all the above, start AutoCAD alone with a blank/empty file. Then use OPEN command to open all of your files and see what happens.
When i go into the bios settings to change the initial display output from Integrated graphics to PCIe
and save the settings the next time i boot up the bios splash screen will not appear on either the PCIe or the onboard video output and i have to physically open the case disconnect the Gpu and change the settings back to the way they were before.
Another issue is when i change the setting for internal graphics from enabled to auto or disabled i can not get back into the bios until i reset the settings again. I have been looking up for solutions online but most things i found just tell me to change these two settings.
My current conjectures are as follows:
1- Monitor may not be compatible with the output from the Gpu(but since it works through the onboard graphics output that is unlikely), I do not have access to another monitor or screen so i can not test this, but i have tried all HDMI inputs on mine. Made no difference
2- The HDMI output on the Graphics card does not allow or support being used while booting(there are 3 DP and 1 HDMI outputs on the card since the screen i am using does not have DP i can only use the HDMI port)
So far i have tried changing the aforementioned settings in the bios multiple times, along with mounting the graphics card on different PCIe slots which changed nothing. The bios is updated to the latest F11 version and all drivers are up to date, Posting here is pretty much my last option as i can no longer think of any other option any help would be appreciated.
If I set the initial output to PCIe the machine may be going into the bios but there is no output from the HDMI so this is only a guess,
If i mesh the DEL key when it is booting with PCIe the screen remains black indefinitely until i press F4 which should be because it gets out of the bios and continues to boot and when the OS starts up the screen comes up.
If i disable the internal graphics and set the initial output to PCIe it does not change anything and as a extra step to be able to get back into the bios i have to reset the settings and boot once without the GPU(i mean physically removing it) because the default setting in the bios is booting with PCIe if the board detects a GPU(in this case i cannot get into the bios through windows either).
Also this may not be the case but, would the GPU and the Onboard graphics have different resolutions in the bios which could also be causing some sort of issue with the screen (though the tv always says no signal but i am not sure if it has a different error like incompatible resolution or something similar.
From there, it goes through the production pipeline to us, where there's back and forth communication about how to execute it and what the timeline is. And then we just crank it out. They put a lot of faith in us to just make it funny.
Ryan: Yeah, I think as a graphic artist on a comedy show, you just have to have a good visual vocabulary. You have to be familiar with all the old movies, TV, and music that you can pull from and reference from a graphical standpoint.
Ryan: I found it by watching a rotoscoping competition on YouTube. It was four guys from Corridor Crew, and they were all using different methods of rotoscoping to see who could edit the video, the fastest and the most accurate.
One of them was like, there's this thing and it just does it in like a click. It blew my mind because here I am in After Effects, with the Rotobrush doing it frame-by-frame myself. And this guy was done in three minutes on a really complex shot.
Andro: We used Runway for a music video commemorating the anniversary of the Americone Dream ice cream by Stephen Colbert. They put together a music video with Sara Bareilles and Josh Groban. The writers wrote the lyrics, and there was talent onboard, a script written, and a shooting schedule done.
Ryan: Yeah, we tracked it and then we needed floor reflections. I had the idea of putting plexiglass underneath the paint so that it could get accurate reflections. And then, we just dropped it into the shot and I did a little bit more roto work because he has to be behind the dancers and Katy Perry and the sharks, and everything.
But by doing those fast rotos in just a few minutes on normal days where we only have a couple of hours to make a bunch of different effects shots, Runway is extremely helpful and lets us focus on the other parts of the comping, or animation or other creative things we have to do. It really speeds up our pipeline.
Ryan: I think it's also a bit of a Pandora's box situation because now that it's clear what we can do in the time that we're allotted, like, it makes me nervous with what we might be asked to do next.
The realism of it from beginning to end, knowing what angle to shoot it at and getting a proper map for the for the roto and then the proper reflections and keys, it's not technically a joke or comedy, but the fact that it looks like it was really there and it really happened, can play into the joke.
Andro: We do a lot of character animations, cartoon-type animations and taking a person and putting them in a movie, saying a certain line from a movie. There's Runway software that lets you insert those words into that person's mouth, which is kind of frightening, to think that you could just make someone say something else. But it's very interesting. We're just starting to explore it now.
Ryan: I did a quick test last week, where I used Biden from a press conference and made him say something. And then I used Runway's roto to cut his head out and then tracked it back on to footage of Biden. And I was kind of surprised at how easy it was.
Andro: Well, we spent a lot of time tracking footage, which is usually the first thing that you have to do. Set it up. And then, you can start being creative. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes it's a little janky. Using A.I. to expedite that tracking process would be extremely helpful.
Ryan: Yeah, definitely. I also understand there was something they had for depth of a scene. So you're looking at a shot, and it could understand what the space of that shot is, and then you could put things in the middle ground or the background of something and then use the roto tool to put things back on top of it.
In reference to your question about adding the option of showing FPS on games via Intel Graphics Command Center, for us to provide the most accurate assistance on this topic, first, we just wanted to confirm a few details about your system:
The information requested previously is very important since it will allow us to identify the kind of platform that you are using in reference to the possibility that this feature can be implemented in the future, if we need to send your feedback about this scenario or in the case that you are using a mobile processor which actually works based on the customizations done by the manufacturer of the mobile device.
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