I have an old Roland PNC1050 I have been using on an old XP machine with Corel draw X6. The computer is getting tired so I wanted to buy a newer machine with Windows 10 and Currently have Corel Draw 17. I can't get the Windows 10 to install the XP driver's
Personally, I stay away from the newer machines with Windows 10, . I still purchase XP machines, They are very stable and cheap. I am still running my Graphtec on an XP laptop and I have XP laptop back up computers. You do not need a new computer to run a vinyl cutter. You want to leave a cutter on a dedicated computer. I found this online, Might work, might not
Windows 10 might ask you for permission to install. Allow the driver manufacturer to make changes to your PC. The driver will now install and your program will be ready for use following installation.
I have SB on Win10 machine and running a Roland GX-24 with a serial cable via a serial port.The GX-24 has a USB port which I would like to use.I cant find a USB port on the setup menu.Can anyone help me,pleease.Thanks
SignBlazer will access fonts from your Windows System (fonts) folder and also has its own 200 installed fonts, right there in the Program FIles x86/SignBlazerElements/sbfonts -- located on your C: drive.
By the way, here's a hint for ya.
All working files are stored within the 'SBD' folder at the top-level of the C: drive, and it's worthwhile to produce a shortcut to that and have it appear on your desktop. Makes for easier access and allows you to organize files within that folder. I don't just leave them all "loose" in the folder, but rather, create sub-folders within the SBD main archive -------- for instance: "Jobs Finished" (with sub-folders by date) "Jobs Cutting" (stuff that's currently underway into my cutting queue) "Jobs Proposed" (waiting on approval, or still in design phase) Jobs Rejected (yeah, it happens sometimes, a job will go south, customer flakes, etc.) and I even have sub-folders for "Graphics" (vector conversions) and "Proofs" (Exported jpg's of the designs that I email to clients for approvals)
I recently updated my computer Windows 11. I had to reactive the software as some do, but now my MH 721 simply won't cut. The software is detecting it as normal, bit when I go through all the steps and hut "CUT NOW", nothing happens. Common problem? Easy fix?
I delayed it once but it installed anyway the next time I rebooted. Other than stupid rearranging of things and removing stuff I used frequently, it's not bad. Took me an hours or so to figure out how to undo stupid things they changed. Hate the new start menu. They also change the right click on files things. They took away the send to option and hid it in a sub menu. I use the send to all the time! Took me a good while to find online how to get the send to back. Seems like they do a survey, figure out what people use the most, and then get rid of them.
Well, then I can honestly say that I am not looking forward to Win11. I do know that at some point I will have to install and get familiar with, since a lot of the calls I field are more help desk level, but for now, I'm kind of content tell people that I don't have Win11, so I can't do any walk-throughs on how to remedy what it broke
so far on win 11, after getting used to the menu that reminds me more of a mac, I have had no issues (knock on wood) - feeling lucky. but I get what darcshadow is saying it is hard to learn the little navigation changes - wife and myself are thinking in a couple of months of going to streaming service from dish and feeling a lot like an old bugger new having to learn something new after being comfortable for 25+ years. now I do have 2 of the windows 10 machines (one mine and one moms) that just won't do the last 2 updates and after spending 3 days researching and trying different fixes gave up for a while - I needed a break
The most annoying thing, the change to the start menu could be undone with a change in the registry settings however they disabled even that in the last update. I don't get it, why remove an option that clearly people want. If the option was never there in the update I get it, but the code is already there, and is actually probably still there, they just turned off the switch.
Does anyone on here have any useful info on this topic? Windows 11 here. Everything set up, drivers downloaded, connected USB........ Device not found. So yes, I've checked the ports and every other possible manifestation that connects the machine to the computer.
I had a US Cutter SC2 that was a friends and he wanted me to do all his vinyl needs and I could us the cutter as well. I purchased SCAL and I was off and running. Then I did the Thing, I let my computer upgrade to windows 11 and I no longer could cut. I was short on time and returned the cutter to my friend saying I could connect to the cutter any more. This was back in April of 2022. I sent several emailed back and forth to CraftEdge to no avail.
Now it is November 2022 and I purchased my on SC2. with MasterVinyl CUT 5.0. After following all the instructions to install cutter in MVC 5.0 I still could not connect to the new cutter. I turned in a ticket to Future.Support and after 2 days got a response back that said to follow instuctions, that I have already done. I searched the internet for the correct driver and could not find anything that might work and nothing did.
So I called USCutter Service Number and in five minutes Greg sent me the correct driver and I am good. Now I can cut with both MasterVinyl and SCAL. I will be working with my friend to get him up and running. He had not had time to see if the old cutter had a problem, but I don't think so, just USCutter needed to update driver to work with Windows 11.
Nobody is helpful on this. I have the same SC2 cutter and UScutter can't figure it out either. They say it's something to do with windows. Everything is recognized just won't cut. It will even do the test promp where it asks if the cutter responds and it does respond to that and works with Mac laptop just not with windows 11
I read where people were also having the problem with Windows 11. They seem to be making it work by using a Tripp Lite Keyspan Adapter with the serial cable that came with their cutter. The Tripp lite has it's own driver. Tripp Lite is the brand name and has always been recommended to use with value cutters anyway. Much better than the USB on the cutter. Value cutters have a cheap Chinese chipset in them. Not TRUE USB like higher end cutters.
I used the Gumball to scale the horizonal lines.
Then I used Trim command with the crossing window to select the parts to Trim.
I can trim it in 2 crossing windows, if I were more careful. I think I used 3 crossing windows.
@andrew.nowicki Certainly did. I got fouled up after extending all the fret lines and ended with only one bounding box at fret 0 - fret1, but was able to extend the fret lines enough to trim them all , as the extra was too small to begin with and required too much zooming in and out to trim.
The majority of my earlier posts focus on reversing binaries using Radare2/Rizin from the command line. While this is a great option, I have recently switched to using the GUI alternative: Cutter. This post will be an introduction to the tool and how to use it.
Cutter combines a lot of the complex features of Rizin commands into an easy-to-use interface, while still allowing command line access for more experienced users. This is ideal for beginners, but advanced Rizin/Radare2 users can still thrive with this tool.
Along with the decompiler and disassembler views, Cutter allows you to add other tools to the display to aid in analysis. These tools include strings, a graph overview, custom type information, the Rizin console, a search functionality, and many others.
To add a new window to the current layout go to the Windows menu option and select the display you would like to place. You can then drag the window around the app and place it anywhere in the UI. For example, a user can add a new disassembly tab to the current window by going to Windows and clicking Add Disassembly.
Once the new tab is created, you can move it into a window of its own by clicking the diamond icon in the top-right corner of the window. You can now drag the new window to the right of the screen so that you can split it with another window. This allows you to have two windows opened at once.
Now it is possible to open different functions in our new disassembly window without affecting the original function view. This is extremely useful when analyzing a binary with multiple function calls.
Other features in the disassembly view include: the ability to change function names, variable names, and get references to certain addresses. This is all accessed by right-clicking on the assembly instruction or variable you want information about.
For example, you can change the name of a variable by right-clicking it and selecting Rename local.... Cutter will display a menu that allows you to rename the variable. You can also change the type information about the variable to better fit the actual code.
Like most disassemblers, Cutter offers a graph view of the current function. This allows an analyst to see branches that occur in a function from if statements and allows easier navigation than the standard disassembly view. You can add a graph view by going to Windows and clicking on Add Graph.
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