CRACK Cast Wysiwyg R36 Cracked

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Marisol Stgermain

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Jul 17, 2024, 9:30:55 PM7/17/24
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Wysiwyg is so simple to use, it has brought me great success in China which has a rapidly developing lighting industry with new local fixtures being made all the time. Cast software is very quick and helpful when I make a custom library request for these new fixtures.Daniel RichardsonLighting Designer,
Programmer & Operator

CRACK Cast Wysiwyg R36 Cracked


Download Zip https://tlniurl.com/2yMIdM



Wysiwyg is my swiss knife for all my projects from the start to finish. I use it to sell the idea initially to the client, then communicating with technicians when assembling the stage and finally programming the show on site.Raphal GanhyLighting Designer,
Programmer & Operator

During the Rio Olympic Ceremonies, each of our 3 lighting desks had their own wysiwyg system. This allowed us to work when certain elements of our rig were not yet turned on or being maintained, or had been switched off because we had run out of diesel for the generators. There is no doubt in my mind, that along with English breakfast tea and chocolate digestives, without wysiwyg we would not have come anywhere close to the standard of lighting that we achieved in both Ceremonies.Durham MarenghiLighting Designer,
Durham Marenghi Lighting Design

We've used WYG for the best part of a decade and it is top of our toolbox, it's photo realistic portrayal of lighting and video allows us to deliver clients the idea before they invest saving time and money!Jamie ThompsonLighting Designer,
Co-founder of MIRRAD

CAST Software has added more wysiwyg Essentials online training throughout March, April and May. The live online training seminars are carefully crafted to focus on specific areas of wysiwyg to help save you time and to work more efficiently. Each online seminar covers the essential knowledge needed to be successful with wysiwyg as well as highlighting new features.

Working with Fixtures (register now)
Whether conventional or automated, this seminar will show you how to insert fixtures along with accessories such as gels and gobos onto hang structures such as pipes and truss.

Lighting Plots & Paperwork (register now)
This seminar will demonstrate how easy it is to create professional scaled plots and lighting paperwork, including fixture schedules, hookups, pipe tapes, color and gobo lists to communicate a design accurately with your team.

Delivering wysiwyg experts right to your desktop. Schedule classes at your convenience, from one-hour increments for online help, up to week-long sessions for on-site training. Training sessions are subject to trainer availability and demand. Complete this request form and a member of the training team will be in touch soon.

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Hi
Iam working with some lightdesigners using CAST lightdesign program WYSIWYG. It has been known very tricky to get any CAD-file from whatsoever program to work without redraw everything in WYSIWYG. Do anyone else have experience of exporting to this program? Maybe we could share some tips and tricks?
/F

3] Walls you want to see through, make single sided, flipping the normals if necessary. Do this from the properties dialog, while in quad view, and check the shaded view to see if this is ok. There is no layer select, (from the layer dialog, but there is select by layer in the select menu) so you have to turn on only the layer you want, then select the objects in quad view, and then alter the properties.

If you have the theatre set up using the same origin in rhino, then you can merge objects via dwg in the same way, and they will line up exactly.
However, copy and paste to moi, and export as sketchup from there - gives much better mesh, BUT export lines that will become pipes as dwg, using the wysiwyg export scheme:

If the 2d lines that represent the pipes are imported, R26 will automatically convert them to pipes if they have a block on them that is converted to a fixture on import.
Otherwise, import them, then select them and choose tools / convert / lines into pipes.
Remember to name them properly, and if the lines representing the pipes are from a 2D file, then remember to set their trim heights via the tab key while selected, or from their properties.

On balance perhaps it is better to go through sketchup, since it all seems less complicated, and the results are good.
However, individual things can be merged direct from the rhino file as long as the theatre origins are the same.

Thank You Rabbit
I have to try this but it seems I have gone through some of your suggestions past the years.
One way that did work some years ago (older version of WYSIWYG) was to export layer by layer as a solid DXF.
Now in later versions of WYSIWYG this makes the software to crash.
I do a big modelling job for a theatre and they want it to work with WYSIWYG so I will continue to report the result
And yeah this software seem to be the most uncompatible software I have tryed to export to
Thanks again /F

Hi
Since i can't find any post about the update on 3rd party visualizers, maybe I'm wrong, Parameter For Visualizer Statement . there's just no update on this announcement.
I was wondering whether a software like -converter/ is out anywhere?
The Wyg to MA2 converter tool was a great tool to get a quick or massive design into MA3D when away from a beefy wyg machine.

So yeah, if any one knows if Matthias Schffmann is on this forum, can you @ him?
Or if something like the converter tool is in the works please update me.

/Hkke

If you haven't already done so, you should also suggest to CAST that they implement MVR in WYSIWYG. This way anyone would be able to move freely between WYG, MA3, Vectorworks, and anyone else who implements MVR.

Ryan,
Any word on when the 3rd party visualizers will be implemented in MA3? I know it was a back burner item last year but with current situation I can see it as a forefront item with so many Ma3 users looking for ways to learn the MA3 software.


The MVR will be a great addition to Wysiwyg when available or any 3rd party lighting app. But I still will be relaying on wysiwyg for my pre-vis over the MA3D. I just don't like the output of MA3D. It doesn't have the same vision or output I wish to sell to my clients. It does have its use still (MA3D) for that quick on the spot onsite programming session or stage reference which MVR will help greatly in transferring a design between different platforms.


The current setup of needing hardware to use 3rd party visualizers really only downgrades my decision to select MA3 at the moment. I'm locked to only so many parameters. makes it tough to prepare for a show or festival if it will be larger than what I have on hand or if it's over the MA3 onpc specs. That was a nice thing about Ma2, that I could work freely in on a laptop without the need of nodes or wings. kept my bus mates happy

This was an item I brought up to both MA and Act before I bought into the Ma3 line. just surprised it was pushed back so far on the list.
It is something I see Ma and Act glide over as you did above. you did answer the MVR question but nothing on Hakkee first question on the status of 3rd party visualizers. Feels like MA is really wanting to lock users into using only MA3D for visualizing there designs.

R30 is available to download now from the Members Only Area of the CAST Website: www.cast-soft.com. The release follows a phenomenally successful beta-testing period which saw one tester put the new software to use on an undisclosed high-profile project.

The software gets its name from its ability to deliver renders that are identical to what the designer can expect to see at the event itself, helping users become more professional, more productive and more profitable.

The latest version of the software features a myriad of functional enhancements that shave hours off the event design stage, leading Beta testers to remark that R30 is by some margin the most productive version of wysiwyg yet. Among them was video designer and lighting visualisations specialist, Miguel Ribeiro.

Features new to R30 include: fastFan and fastFocus for Conventionals in CAD Mode and Automated Fixtures in Design Mode, Shaded View Selection in CAD Mode, File Merge, Layer Merge, Interactive Rigging Points for lighting and audio, Pipe & Drape Wizard and DMX control for camera path playback in Live Mode. There have also been a number of enhancements made, including the ability to select fixtures by position, group or type in CAD and Design Modes, enhanced resolution with the Fine Focus Key and additions to the Intensity Designer Tool. Shaded Views now have object, fixture and circuit counts, enhanced camera information and fastRender, which significantly increases the speed of realtime rendering.

Beta testers were particularly impressed with the new fastFan and fastFocus tools. fastFan simplifies aerial focuses and any other fan-like focus by allowing users to grab a group of fixtures, tilt and pan them in unison or spread out the focus with a simple wheel.

fastFocus is a new type of linear focus point that allows the user to draw a line and then select fixtures to assign directly to the line. If the line is resized or relocated, the assigned fixtures will move with it. fastFocus lines have many of the same properties of a Focus Point, but considerably more functionality.

The new merge features were also highly commended. In R30, when merging a file, the current editable state of layers is now ignored for both the file being merged and the active file. This means that objects being merged in will no longer have to be put on the current layer. A new Layer Import dialog appears when merging one wysiwyg file into another, which allows users to rename layers instead of combining them and will display the state of the layer in both files. Furthermore, R30 allows the merging of two or more layers together in Layer Manager, for straightforward combining of layers within a drawing.

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