ChopperNova
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Everything posted by ChopperNova
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I assume you checked the board's warranty status. Other considerations on switching from AMD to Intel (and sometimes just switching mainboards), and vice versa: It requires an OS reinstall, and getting it back "just so" is always a bigger pain than you think it will be. If Windows, you'll have to deal with activation. Make sure you have your bitlocker keys/passwords backed up. Many websites, such as banks and health insurance companies, authorize access to your account to a specific "machine". This can be an unbelievable hassle. It will necessitate dealing with TPM, which holds encryption keys and protects your machine from every conceivable threat. Or it does nothing. Nobody knows... You'll forget to save all your presets from Photo, Photoshop, etc... Goodbye custom palettes and brushes! Windows use a Mรถbius file hierarchy in c:\users, and you will go bugf*** trying to copy the whole thing, especially if you have DropBox. When doing time-consuming, mass Windows file operations, it will proceed normally until the moment you leave the system, whereupon it will stall with: "thumbs.db is system file...", causing you to scream obscenities when you return. This cycle repeats indefinitely. You'll be stuck with a new BIOS setup written by the criminally insane.
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Dude, the Ryzen 1700X isn't a shitty processor, it's... um... artisanal.๐ But seriously, I've got your same CPU and MB, an aging GPU and not terribly fast RAM, with nothing overclocked. Affinity Photo V2 load time is less 5 seconds, including the time it takes me to fumble through the Trial popup. And since one, single -- not-well-debugged -- program is an outlier, it makes no rational sense to blame the 1700X. I'm not saying that it's as fast as new processors, far from it -- and I don't mean to be a dick, but you seem more interested in justifying an upgrade than identifying the actual issue. And most people who build systems, on Twitter and everywhere else, don't know WTF they're doing. OK, well, I do mean to be a dick to them.๐คฌ
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While we're waiting, lets' try a little Occam's Razor, shall we: Which takes longer for a software company that's been in business since 1987: "Engineering" industry standard installers for software that is not only their primary source of revenue, but already works when you unzip it; or weaseling out of an agreement with Microsoft?
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It's horrifying how much stuff connects to the internet, isn't it? Like, everything all the time. As for V2, it could be that I've accessed the stock images in V1, and while my Stock Images tab was visible, it wasn't active. I don't think I've used it in V2 at all. Although I suspect it's something to do with being a trial, it's curious it stopped when this thread became active. There's only two logical conclusions: They quickly shut down the data collection when their conspiracy was uncovered. Elon Musk is a lizard person.
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Maybe two years ago there was an issue with a 1TB Samsung 980 <something> nvme. It acted like it was thermal throttling at around 50, and Samsung Magician didn't seem to recognize it properly. Others noted issues with this particular model, so it wasn't just me; it could have just been MB compatibility. I actually sent it back and got a 970 EVO and it's great, although it's not any faster than my 500GB 950 EVO SATA. At that time, the 970 EVO was $20-$30 more than the 980. Of course, there may have been just one, single bad 980, and Amazon kept reselling it every time it was returned... I also always recommend Samsung, but he should be aware of this and be suspicious of any 980 "deals". And always make sure he can return them.
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I have the same CPU/MB as you, and I'd advise you to increase your RAM above 16 GB. It doesn't matter the speed of every other component when Windows starts thrashing the swap file, which could cause thermal throttling on an SSD. Hence, I prefer more RAM to faster RAM. I also prefer more cores to faster cores. It also kinda matters what you actually use the computer for. Beware of benchmarks. As you edit increasingly larger files, the most RAM will ultimately beat the fastest CPU. A half-empty mechanical drive will beat a 95% full SSD in real world performance no matter how much faster it benches. I'm not against upgrading, I'm just a little lost as to what issue you're trying to resolve, as you originally said it took 40 seconds to load Affinity Paint V2. You gotta use a little logic here; do you really think it would take a CPU TEN TIMES faster to load V2 vs V1? So anyway, here's some benchmarks. The Affinity benchmarks were the second run. The Host is running unzipped MSIX, the Guest is running installed normally. Note how Paint V2 handles Consolas monospaced font by default in "Affinity Photo v2.0.0".
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Thanks to everyone who replied. For those unaware, the Amazon server it connects to is, in itself, perfectly innocent. It's not a direct line to the store. The issue is that the user is being surveilled. I always forget Affinity is available for Mac. My bad. I'm using Windows 10. The program I use is TinyWall, which can block programs/connections the user chooses: https://tinywall.pados.hu/ Once upon a time, I think I did block that server (in Window's hosts file), and it messed stuff up. I haven't noticed, but I might test that. Absolutely it should be possible to disable. Everything should be fully disclosed: What's collected, what's done with it, how long it's kept, etc. My policy is to block software from companies that do it secretly and allow it from, well, honest companies. Logging in/out doesn't matter, I haven't downloaded any content, and don't display the Welcome... window. What are you using to monitor connections? More info: I noticed this because it hits my TinyWall firewall. Allowing it through the firewall during startup and then overnight doesn't matter. It starts hitting it all over again. I've tested two Windows 10 installs. One is unzipped in, and the other is the installed MSIX in a fresh (although unregistered) Windows 10 VM. They both behave the same. This is all three program/apps installed as a set. I'm using the Trial Version. I won't purchase it until there's industry standard installers available. I was a user of all three V1 programs, hence my real name is displayed in the Help->My Account... page. The box is unchecked, and it's not just checking daily, but continually, like when I open & close files. And now when I went back to test, it's not doing it on either installs. Unfortunately, TinyWall only displays the last 5 minutes of blocked apps, so I have no log screenshot. Now I gotta photoshop a fake one, anyone know a stable image editor I could use? *BaZiiiiing!* Thanks again to all who responded. There was definitely something going on, I'd just like to know what. Even in the literally impossible event that I made an error (which I will ultimately correct in the thread title, if possible).
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Colours changing on exporting
ChopperNova replied to peterhammer's topic in Affinity on Desktop Questions (macOS and Windows)
I cannot replicate this. Are you using File->Export, or the Export Persona? The only bug I found was in the File->Export panel, down in the Advanced selection. If you don't use a preset, the ICC Profile box can display a random profile. I got AnimePalette, a profile I've never used. Perhaps it used AI to choose the profile? I mean, those flower tendrils resemble some pretty sexy tentacles. ๐ฅฐ I don't know whether Affinity Photo V2's ICC Profile box assigns the profile, performs a conversion, or something else. Reopening the exported file produced "The Embedded ICC Profile cannot be used because of a program error. Ignoring the profile." pop-up in Photoshop CS6 for me. Although the image wasn't corrupt, the profile is. I couldn't replicate it. So... Um... I guess that makes two bugs...? One possible fix for you is to make sure you explicitly set the ICC Profile box in export settings. Disclaimer: I'm somewhat colorblind but this preview looks OK to me, even though the resulting file choked Photoshop: (CTRL+Mouse Wheel zooms the preview window. Zoom all the way out and then back in you can get 101%. Not exactly 100%, but good enough -- A phrase evidently uttered frequently during the development of V2.) -
Why are the V2 apps constantly connecting to the internet? This is not local network, but to an Amazon Web Services server. And I do mean constant. Every time you load a file, or even go between RAW<-->Develop, it's connects. I'd REALLY like an OFFICIAL answer on this: EXPLICITLY what's being sent, why, where is it disclosed, and how do we opt out?
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Sometimes Window's icon cache becomes corrupt, and there's a simple fix. Go here and follow the "Automatically Rebuild the Icon Cache" instructions: https://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/49819-icon-cache-rebuild.html Don't let the word "tutorials" make your eyes glaze over, it's really just downloading a .bat file and running it. I right click and "Run as administrator...", but I'm not sure it's necessary. Don't forget to reboot, then let everyone know whether it worked.
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Ahhh yes, GIMP. The program everyone praises, but nobody uses... ๐It's a joke, don't get your delicates in a twist. For those unfamiliar, there's a quite excellent free program called Paint.NET. Despite the unfortunate name, it's not web-based, just a program. โ ๏ธ!!! DANGER DANGER WILL ROBINSON DANGER DANGER !!!โ ๏ธ It doesn't install as an app, so it lacks the security, functionality, telemetry, and wondrous benefits that an MSIX provides. The website is here: https://www.getpaint.net/ They want to you to use the Windows Store, where they charge $7.99 for the convenience of not having to hunt around to find the free hidden download link. It's almost like nobody would use the Windows Store, so they gotta be tricked into it. Here's the direct link, which itself is a .zip containing a downloader/installer which downloads/installs the program, so you gotta let it trough your firewall to install. These nonstandard, extra steps are solely for the benefit of the customer. You're welcome. https://www.dotpdn.com/downloads/pdn.html NB 1.0: This isn't really alternative to Affinity Paint, but some people could find it useful. NB 1.1.0.5: I just installed from that link, and it works fine. But use you own judgement. NB 2.0: (NB 2.0 is currently only available in Visual Braille. You're welcome.)
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While true to some degree, it isn't entirely the case, else Adobe would have little advantage. When you look at the development rate of something like DaVinci Resolve Studio in the past two years alone, it makes Serif's development look positively glacial. At any rate, I lay the blame entirely at the feet of management. It doesn't matter if you have a first rate engineering team, if you have fuzzy-minded management that's not only inept, but has misplaced priorities. Think how much dev time they're wasting on this MSIX fiasco, and they still can't even manage an ETA for industry standard installers for V2. They act like some Kick-Starter Startup, rather than a real company. What's actually in Publisher V2 is great, I just can't wait 'till they finish it. (Slight correction: Wikipedia places the intro year of InDesign at 1999, but it doesn't change the discussion.)
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I do not, sorry. Thoughts: Do you know anything about Resizeable BAR BIOS settings? My MB (Asus X-470x Prime) supports it, but either my CPU or GPU doesn't, so it's off. Perhaps NVIDIA cards handle this differently than Radeon cards on AMD MBs? Just a shot in the dark, trying to find the common denominator of failure. Do you if there's a difference between people who installed the MSIX as an app, or Unzipped and ran it from that directory (like me)? Windows may allocate resources differently to apps, since it's "sandboxed", isn't it getting a virtual GPU device? So It's probably Affinity's choice of clumping cat-litter to fill the sandbox. That's my theory, and I'm sticking with it. Keep in mind that the original post was about a 40 second load time, so it's not a performance issue per se, but a severe bug or bottleneck or incompatibility. If you'd like to donate a shiny new high end NVIDIA card, I'll be happy to put it in my system, as a personal favor for you. ๐ ALSO, for people with AMD systems, there's chipset drivers that should be installed in addition to the display drivers, et al. It's not uncommon for manufacturers to have additional drivers if the board has special features, usually enhanced USB or networking. Nobody seems to know this, for some reason: https://www.amd.com/en/support/chipsets/amd-socket-am4/x470 . That's for x470, for example.
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To add to my previous post, my V2 installation was rename the MSIX to ZIP and extract it hack. It's possible that Windows treats programs installed as an app differently from programs when it comes to allocating resources, but I don't know. Another thing to look at, V1 and V2 use scratch/temp folders, which go on your C:\, these can inflate rapidly, and when you have less the 10% space on drive, performance can fall dramatically, even on an SSD. One should be able to specify these directories, like most other software, but it is what it is. I use this program to analyze my disks, and it's a good way to see where your space is evaporating to: https://www.diskanalyzer.com/ Needing a new CPU is the least likely issue, especially if you're happy with it otherwise. EDIT: Affinty Paint V2 opens for me in about 3-4 seconds, which is what V1 loaded in. Just counting One One-Thousand, Two One-Thousand...
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I have a Ryzen 7 1700X, and it's perfectly fine for most things, including editing 4K video in DaVinci Resolve Studio. Suggesting he needs to replace the 1700x for something like Affinity V2 is utter madness. I have a Radeon RX580 with 8GB of RAM and 64 GB system RAM, and here's one problem I've found with AP V2: It horks up massive amounts of GPU RAM, and when Windows runs out of GPU RAM, it uses system RAM to swap (same idea as a page file). When this happens, the program starts to become unresponsive. This can make other programs run slowly, or even the entire Windows interface lag. So my suggestion would be to DISABLE "Enable OpenCL computer acceleration" in all the V2 apps performance settings. You can monitor this in the Task Manager, scroll down and select the GPU box an it will display a consumption graph.
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I agree. I don't believe for a minute they have any disinterested professional consultants on staff, either that, or they ignore them. I haven't seen much evidence that they even listen to their users unless there's a firestorm that could affect their bottom line. Perhaps some consider taking bug reports and feature requests on V1 software that's long been out of development (in favor of V2) "listening"? I actually prefer working in Affinity programs to anything else, and I'm not a DTP guy, but the lack of footnotes, et al. until this year is literally incomprehensible to me. It speaks volumes to the "professional" consultants they have on staff -- I mean, they couldn't even write a their own Shareholders' Report without completely unacceptable "workarounds"๐ฎ. Footnotes have been a core feature in even simple word-processors for home computers since the 1970s. I honestly don't understand Serif's thinking here, as this feature should have been in it before even the first line of code was written. And now we have footnotes, but since they're a new feature, the user will have to babysit them to make sure they work properly -- although forcing customers to be beta testers is pretty standard in the software industry today these days.
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In FastStone, In lieu of supporting the actual thumbnail, just an icon to show that an .afphoto exists would be extremely helpful. That's been about my only complaint about FastStone is it's not always explicitly clear if a folder is empty, or merely has no image files. It's a great program I've used forever. They are a donation based freeware, so maybe if we got people to pledge donations that might encourage them? I dunno. Serif could make it happen, if the management wasn't vapor-locked in a strategic vacuum, where the Real World is never heard. They should just license FastStone, skin it, and call it "Affinity V2 DAM powered by FastStone" and include it with every V2 sale.
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But, but... Serif Techs determined that 99.9% of the people would be able to install without issues. Remember, they determined it and independently came to the same accurate-within-a-tenth-of-a-percent statistic that MS did in their marketing materials. ๐ Seriously, there's some fundamental disconnect between Serif and their customers that is incredibly frustrating. While their products aren't feature-for-feature replacements for Adobe's, they could be a credible alternative for many, even professionals. But they have no clue how professionals (or advanced "creatives", etc) actually work, and worse, DON'T CARE. I mean, one of the official reasons given for their exclusive use of MSIX was that it integrates better with Microsoft Photos. That's the one "workflow" they expected you to use, (had the installer worked, that is.) They solved the MSIX fiasco, but they really need to engage with real world use cases. Not just with proper betas to kill bugs, but to improve the usability of their products within the customers' workflow.
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This is very good, as soon as I can install it properly I'm gonna buy all three. It's exceptional software. There's one issue for Serif to consider: I didn't actually know V2 existed until I visited the site to see if they were even still alive. I was in the habit of starting V1 programs daily to check for updates, and it had been a long while since the last one. I understand there's a difference between updates and upgrades, but a "V2 Is Now Available!" pop-up would have been helpful, as there may be customers who don't realize V2 is out.
