It's in german, but a rough translation is: "Enscape got shut down unexpectedly. Please try re-opening the Enscape Standalone Host. "..." Please send us your Feedback including the log files of Enscape. "..." "
Please be aware, that Windows sometimes displays graphics card drivers as being up to date, even when this is not the case. Therefore we advise that you do not upgrade your drivers via the Windows Device Manager.
If you continue to experience this, then please send us the necessary log files as described here, along with the dump files to sup...@enscape3d.com, and add a link to this thread and my name as well for context.
Unfortunately our .exe standalones to not support Intel on-board graphics either, no matter the Rendering Quality set or such. There is also no way I'm afraid to adjust the rendering quality of our Web Standalones, mainly due to technical (WebGL) limitations around which we cannot easily workaround.
This is probably just noise and I'm stating the obvious... but it seems to me that the stand alone files were intended to share out with clients and/or team members who don't have access or understanding of work-station level machines? As such I would expect that the stand alones could be viewed on "whatever" (including Mac, ahem, which the vast majority of clients use while sitting on their couches at home looking at what their architect sent them) and shouldn't be dependent on expanded video cards and up-to-the-moment drivers. So far as the low quality rendering and lack of environment adjustments - take a look at a Hover.to model to see how nice it can be, even on a mobile device. Just some fodder for future consideration.
JPBernier I agree with the sentiment of your statement and fully agree there should be some sort of smart phone support for the stand-alones. Realistically though, there are so many different PC specs out there combined with the minimum specs needed to run a live rendering platform that I don't know how you change the current threshold Enscape has created. I'd rather my clients not have a stand alone at all over one that looks terrible because it had to be bastardized to run on their frail home PC/MAC. Apple is coming out with more powerful products, but most commonly owned Macs today are not powerful enough on the GPU side to run Enscape well.
This error message indicates that the RTSP service is unavailable, but the root cause is unknown. The most frequent cause is an excessive number of streams. A unit restart can be a temporary reason, but there could also be more severe firmware problems or errors in the configurations.
Lag is another term for delay, and it is caused by high latency. End-to-end latency is the delay from when an image is captured by a device until the image is visible on a video display. End-to-end latency is divided into three steps that impact the total latency; device, network, and client latency.
Network factors that can affect latency are network infrastructure, amount of data, and transmission protocol (UDP/TCP). If the network bandwidth is limited, the device must compensate the quality of the stream (reduce the bitrate) to match the available bandwidth. To reduce the bitrate, the device lowers the image quality or the frame rate.
In general, we recommend that you use the default settings on your Axis device. The default settings are a sort of sweet spot where the image settings and stream settings are optimized and balanced to provide a fluid video stream in most of the common scenes and scenarios. Any modification of the settings may impact the video fluidity negatively.
Turn on Hardware acceleration which is a feature in video management systems and clients that moves all graphics and text rendering from the CPU to the Graphics Processing Unit (GPU).
Set the frame rate to a specific value in the web interface. A higher frame rate gives you a smoother motion fluid video especially when you are monitoring moving objects. To ensure that quick movements of fast-moving objects are captured in detail, raise the frame rate.
In general, we recommend that you use the default settings on your Axis device. The default settings are a sort of sweet spot where the image settings and stream settings are optimized and balanced to provide a fluid video stream in most of the common scenes and scenarios. You can reset the settings in the web interface.
Limit the bitrate to a specific value in the web interface. Be aware that the bitrate needs to increase when the image activity increases. If the maximum value limits the bitrate too much it can affect the image quality negatively.
To rule out any latency potentially introduced by a video management system, we recommend testing the latency in the device web interface first. The best way to do this is to test with the device connected directly to a midspan and then from the midspan to a laptop. Make sure your network cables are working properly. However, we understand that this is not always possible if the devices are already up and running.
A network trace from the device can also be used to showcase the delays and response time. The below command is a 60 second capture of a network trace from the device with an IP address of 192.168.0.90. Paste the url into your browser but replace the default IP address with the IP address of your device.
Axis is not responsible for how the device configuration described in this guide affects your system. If the device or system fails due to your changes or you get other unexpected results, we recommend that you restore the device to the default settings.
so I know that I cannot export as indd or idml but I want to export to a file format that will open on adobe indesign because I am in a team and they all use indesign so are there any free software that will convert affinity publisher files to indesign files were they can edit it. or can I use one of the file formats to export it.
This saddens me. I'm completing a huge project with Publisher and the printer now needs it packaged - which Publisher cannot do - and I can't get it into InDesign to package it. I love Affinity but this may be the nail in the coffin for me.
If you give them a PDF they have a file with the images and the fonts, which would seem to be everything they need. So if that is not enough, and they are specifically saying "package" (as opposed to PDF) then they may mean "an InDesign file and images and fonts packaged as InDesign would package them." And in that case your only choice is to use InDesign, because even if 1.9 were working for you the packages it produces are not InDesign files, and they require Publisher.
And if it doesn't it's going to be a huge issue for a portion of users. I can't help what programers do and don't do just as I can't help what printers will and won't accept. The unfortunate reality of the industry.
Are you sure your printer can even use a Publisher file? I don't know any print or design house that uses any of the Affinity software. Adobe is the standard here and I am assuming they would be asking for a packaged Indesign file. I would check with them if they can use Publisher as you may be wasting your time trying to get Publisher to package.
If you are collaborating you should all be using the same software. You will create nothing but headaches trying to make something work as it will never be 100% and only create more work for the team.
Affinity has some great software, powerful and extremely affordable, but it is not a replacement for Adobe in a collaborative environment. Make life easy on yourself and everyone else and stick to what the team is using.
you addressed supplying them a PDF, which is something I know we prefer here as do other local printers. Personally I only want working files if I need to make serious changes or alterations. A properly made PDF with crops and bleeds gets things moving much faster then opening a working file and preparing a PDF after that for print. Cutting out a middle step that is really not needed.
Regarding Serif addressing Indesign and their file I don't think this is not something they really can do beyond what they have now with IDML files. Sure they may be able to improve things but it will never be 100% compatibility between the two. At the end of the day they are 2 page layout programs made by 2 different companies. You will never have a perfect conversion. So you really have 1 option if you do not want to use Indesign, you need need to supply print ready PDF's. If your printer still insists on packaged Indesign files then you can either use Indesign or find another printer.
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