Rhino Mac Os X

Hello, thank you for your reply and implication, i just past here the software informations, and i also include in the mail the crash report from rhino. Seems to be user specific – just tried it on a user account that had never Rhino’d before and all fine Really? (!) Very interesting. And - just to be absolutely sure - this was on the exact same machine that was crashing (presuming the answer is yes). In this particular case, I would be very interested to see the contents of the crash report after it crashes. When you restart Rhino on the machine that has crashed, a crash report dialog should appear.

Can you please attach the contents of that text in a file here? (or you can email it to if that works beter) Thanks in advance, -Dan.

You mentioned that you “ditched preferences”. Deleting the preferences file using the Finder no longer works. The OS restores your preferences file from a backup that it keeps. We would like to get a copy of your preferences file so we can try using it to duplicate this problem. Redgate sql prompt keygen generator letlts 1 After you have confirmed that Rhino is still crashing, zip a copy of your preferences file and email it to either.

Dec 9, 2015 - Rhino for Mac is here. While it doesn't have the exact same features as its Windows counterpart, Rhino for Mac offers a compelling 3D.

After you do so, see for the current method for resetting the contents of your preferences file. Reset your preferences and test again for a crash. We’d like to know if this fixes the crashes. The crash reports we have right now are not conclusive, but it looks like Rhino might be crashing on certain computers in macOS Sierra when drawing the buttons in one of the tool palettes. We can examine your preferences file to see what tool palettes are active when trying to duplicate this.

If you’re looking for an NVidia option in a laptop format you’re very limited with Apple laptops as it’s only the highest spec 15' MacBook Pro that offers an Nvidia option and they’re more than double the price of the base model (unfortunately there is no way to upgrade Apple laptop GPU units as they are hardwired into the control board). However I will say that with Apple laptops if you can afford to buy the premium options the laptop will last you far longer. I recently passed on a 15' Macbook Pro from 2006 to a family member (2.6 Ghz dual core with 4gb memory) and they use the Rhino beta without any problems. You pay an awful lot for the final 25% of performance but you also pay for protection against early obsolescence. You can of course go for one of the the non Nvidia models. I own the latest MacBook Air (Intel powered GPU) and that runs Rhino perfectly. I wouldn’t use the Air for rendering tasks (beyond preview renders) but that isn’t the point of the Air.

Your have three other options here that spring to mind: 1.) Search out the latest “hackintosh compatible laptop” options that are available to you. Be careful here though as you really need to know what you’re doing. Obrazec podvedeniya itogov vo vzvode4862318.

2.) Buy second hand hardware from a few years ago that meets your specification for Nvidia hardware 3.) Buy a reconditioned unit direct from Apple that has the Nvidia option. This would be my recommended option as it will save you a good deal plus you get all your standard warranty/support options of buying direct from Apple.

Hope this helps. I’ve never attempted to ‘Hackintosh’ a laptop and everything I’ve read has put me off.

Grasshopper rhino mac os x

A particular laptop model might work for a certain OS X revision flavour but as soon as Apple changes the drivers as it updates the OS you can run into problems. If I were on a limited budget I’d be looking at the 13' Macbook Air’s (new, reconditioned or second hand if it’s one from the last 12 months or so) as they have more than enough grunt to handle Rhino but will obviously be pretty slow for heavy duty rendering purposes (I also think they’re reasonable value for money). Any laptop than can handle heavy duty rendering purposes like the Windows variants made by Boxx are going to cost far more than a standard laptop so the Windows vs OS X agument is fairly redundent. Just look at the cost of this base model made by Boxx: On the base consumer end, Apple hardware is definitely more costly than it’s Windows cousin but as soon as you get into pro configurations in many cases Apple hardware is actually more cost effective. I’m not going to get into an operating system debate here though as it seems redundent on an OS X forum.

Back to Hackintoshes, the desktop variants work really well and we run a number of them to add GPU rendering firepower to our network rendering solution at the studio.