![]() ![]() But I have all the Genesis Starter Essentials packages loaded at this time. ![]() I also have my DAZ Content on an external hard drive as it is now if fully loaded well over 1.75 Tb. I have opened three windows to look at the areas of 'look at this 1st, 2nd, and 3rd.' and will need to adjust for the differences between Windows and Apple file structures. That's what I would like to see see too. That was my question on this topic! The download uses only items from the various Genesis Starter Essentials which come free with Daz. If you have not seen this, there is a scene download with some quick instructions. Then we can compare it directly to other hardware who have ran this bench. It would give us a baseline for the performance the M1 Pro and Daz Iray. If you wouldn't mind running a test of the benchmark scene we have in the forums, that would be really appreciated. I haven't tried hooking up one of my older monitors to it yet. A friend bought me a magnifing strip so I can read the print. My biggest challenge is seeing the screen. These were not elaborate or anything, mostly tests. I have a MacBook Pro M1 that I bought in January 2022, and while I have been installing content slowly, I have done a few Iray renders without issue. Online help had to give up.) Old eyes are a pain. (I had to give up on my iMac working with D|S back in 2017 when it crashed multiple times and an Nvidia update wiped out my drive. I have a habit of working with both at the same time. Otherwise I have to keep switching the workspace to open & close the left, right sides. I will need to see if I can switch out my iMac's right screen which sits next to it when I really want to work in D|S. But I played with it and I chose the one below the largest. Thank you! I hadn't looked into that because I had not thought it would affect anything in D|S. By the sound of it, you'll probably want the "Larger Text" option. Click the "Resolution: Scaled" radio button (by default, "Resolution: Default for Display" is probably checked), and then pick from one of the options shown. If you open System Preferences and click the Displays item, you should be able to change the screen resolution to something more comfortable for you. ![]() ![]()
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