I was using rhino 7 from last couple of weeks and it was working quite good. The only problem was related to package manager, thus for fixing this issue i restored the firewall settings. Now everytime i open the rhino, it shows license removed. Kindly help me through this.
The horns of most animals have a bony core covered by a thin sheath of keratin, the same substance as hair and nails. Rhino horns are unique, however, because they are composed entirely of keratin. Scientists had been puzzled by the difference, but the Ohio University study now has revealed an interesting clue: dark patches running through the center of the horns.
The study also found that the melanin and calcium patches appear in yearly growth surges but the effects of temperature, diet and stress on the growth are still unknown. The results of the horn growth study may be of interest to conservation groups whose goal is to strengthen rhino populations and reduce the poaching of horn for the black market.
If you visit the Watani Grasslands habitat or perhaps take a Zoofari bus tour, you will likely notice one of our rhinos, Abby, is missing her front primary horn. Abby hit her horn against a bollard and cracked it at the base on February 27; this happened when she was most likely roughhousing with the other rhinos. Over the next couple of days, the crack continued to travel around the base of the horn. She rubbed her itchy horn until the horn finally came off a few days later on March 1.
While the horns are used for protection against predators or other rhinos, they are more often used to dig the wallows that rhinos use to coat their skin in mud. Here at the Zoo, our wallows are maintained on habitat by the other rhinos, and Abby has no trouble navigating social society within our herd.
Unfortunately, that characteristic horn is one of the reasons why rhino populations are declining. Some traditional Asian cultures mistakenly believe the horns have medicinal properties, but their healing abilities are no better than brewing tea from your hair or chewing your fingernails. (My mother broke me of that habit long ago). This misconception fuels the desire for horns in illegal markets at prices high enough to balance the risk of poaching, which is the unlawful harvesting of any animal product. Greed has the poachers cutting the horn below that germinal bed where the horn grows from, and, unlike Abby, those rhinos who survive poaching incidents will never grow horns again.
The good news is that the tides are changing, and campaigns to raise awareness and remove the myths about horns resonate in the younger populations of these countries. Support is increasing to help the rangers who protect rhinos and the sanctuaries that raise the orphaned calves with advanced technologies and improved veterinary care. Even better, one of the best ways you can help rhinos is to visit them! Most ranger salaries and equipment needs are funded through tourism revenue. If you are like me and just can't quite put together a trip to Africa or Asia at the moment, you can also visit them here at the North Carolina Zoo. Proceeds from N.C. Zoo Society tours, Zoofari experiences, and many giftshop items go directly to the conservation projects we support both locally and internationally.
I'm a support specialist for Autodesk. I pretty sure I've imported an ACIS or SAT file into Rhino before, but I may be mistaken. It has been a long time since I opened Rhino. I'm definitely not a daily Rhino user.
I'd also note that there are the cloud translators (the ones you use when you export from the Dashboard) and then there are the local translators (File > Export command). It might be interesting to see if there is any difference depending on which option you use.
I can't think of a similar feature to nested blocks in Fusion. Something similar might be the Patch > Modify > Unstitch command before exporting to convert solid bodies into surfaces and then Patch them back together on the Rhino side of things.
I've found that after the update, the STEP files from Fusion are recognized differently by Rhino, Rhino now sees that not as surfaces/polysurfaces, but as Block Instances, which (theoretically) can be further exploded into Surfaces/Polysurfaces. The problem is that new STEP exports from Fusion cause Rhino to build wrong Block Instances (see attached a screen from Rhino: torus-shaped artifacts for all filleted edges...)
This problem is as much down to Rhino as Fusion, the STP file in your first post opens fine in ZW3d and Geomagic. The reason you are getting blocks is because Rhino is not trimming the surfaces correctly so it's converting it to a block. I've seen this a lot with imports from Solidworks where a trim doesn't work and for some reason rhino then converts the collection of surfaces to a block.
However, maybe I didn't say it clearly in the beginning: this used to work OK for months, but after the recent update of Fusion the fillet issue appeared. So logically blaimed the update and I still do...
The problem indeed could be an issue of outdated Rhino5 STEP converter, or that could be a minor issue in Fusion's STEP converter which still can be resolved by newer software like ZW3d on your side and frankly speaking by Keyshot on mine.
I can confirm something has changed. Here the part on the left was exported a couple of months ago and is clean, the part on the right is what I get now and the fillets are coming in as tori! @innovatenate I don't has the STP file any more from the clean version but something has definitely changed.
@innovatenate Attached are 2 stp files. OldBolt is from last year and opens correctly NewBolt is what I get now and the fillet is not trimming correctly. Don't know if the files will be any help. The fillets in the new file are split into 180 sections like in the old version so not sure why there's a problem, has the accuracy used for export changed?
I've passed the findings along to the development team via report UP-36748. They'll be able to take a closer look and provide further information. There are things that sometimes don't make it into the ReadMe.
I just received an update from our development team. After some investigating, they have determined that the issue is not in the Autodesk translators. There is a Rhino import bug/weakness exposed in Rhino 5, but the good news is its slated to be fixed in 6.
Coming from other (more cinematic) programs and render-engines (like Maya, 3dsmax..) I really enjoy the simplicity of making animations and camera paths with enscape. Also the time you have to use to setup the lightning is outstandingly short. But I miss the possibility to animate objects themselves (which is possible with plugins like Bongo for example).
Animations or the Bongo plugin is not yet officially supported by Enscape. Both animations and support for the Bongo plugin is on our agenda though already, since both have been requested before, so I'll add an upvote to both topics.
Since you already have a way to syncronize Rhino - Encape views is it so hard to do to develop a mode where encape is rendering one picture for every time the rhino viewport is changing ? Did you contact the Bongo guys about this?
hi im new on enscape but i really enjoyed to work with it nearly..so im starting to present my projects with it
but big problem in architectural projects is animated objects !
i wondered that enscape doesnt support this then i read this forum SO
Hello! Sorry for your problem. Can you tell me if there are any other problems besides being unable to sync? Like D5 or rhino fizzles out? Which version of the plugin were you using before? Did that version work properly before? You can also send your rhino file to us if it is convenient for you. (sup...@d5techs.com, and please describe the problem)
Richard Thomas, from the wildlife trade monitoring group Traffic, told the BBC, "Its implementation will of course be down to political will but the chances are much better if the orders come from high enough in the government."
"We believe that this latest development at an international level is crucial for South Africa to effectively deal with the current scourge of poaching, and with the illegal hunting largely driven by the international demand for the rhino horn."
The offices I rented had problems such as peeling paint, crumbling plaster and loose tiles. Sometimes the roofs leaked but only when it rained. The plumbing was usually not up to the standards of the Durham good repair ordinance. They also often had cracks in the floor, holes in the ceiling tiles and one space had a carpet that I believe was purchased when Franklin D. Roosevelt was president, but it could have been during the Truman administration.
One office I rented was in a building where the elevator would not stop on my floor on the way up. I usually walked up but some days I rode up to the next floor and then rode down to mine. Perhaps the building should have been condemned for having an improperly functioning elevator, but the rent was right so the people on my floor put up with the inconvenience.
Double Hung prospered and only moved out when the business had expanded into every available corner of the basement and still needed more room. Hoggard also left the basement far better than he found it, making many improvements along the way including enclosing, more or less, the bathroom area.
You admitted in your critique of a Left Wing Proposal to being a completely amoral slumlord willing to put lives at risk for a few pieces of silver. Leasing an unattractive space which is clearly dated for a cheap rent is one thing. Pealing lead based paint and mold are not acceptable to any situation. One causes a brain destroying process and the other an incurable lung disease. It is amoral creeps like YOU who give legs to far reaching costly proposals you roundly criticized. 99.999% of folks who rent space to others do not put renters lives at risk. You admitted you did.
For many small businesses, during the first 2 years, their biggest cash costs are renting a sheltered workplace and paying the vast array of taxes and fees to support an army of bureaucrats. Labor and material costs are often scaled by sales, but the rent and taxes are fixed unavoidable costs.
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