EDIT Based on this video I have downloaded the latest Cura to play with and 'try'. But seriously 500Mb against 70Mb unpacked to Prusa Slicer. Cura is bloated to hell
Then you won't want to run Cura either
Never had any issues with dll anything on a Fusion install or upgrade so I suspect something else in your system may be the issue
I was getting by JUST with an I3 and 8Gb of ram and internal graphics but it was painful to load and not fast to run. It was the reason for the main box upgrade along with 4K video rendering.
Pixel scaling? Non issue for me as I have always run 1080P native until the recent 1440P upgrade.
Just simply not my experience at all with it. Clearly is knows your dislike for Autodesk anything
I'm on a laptop so that might be the main problem why. Firstly the 1.5x scaling is because 1.0x is too damn small. Secondly, the thing has a wimpy i7 in it and Intel graphics. I'm considering a desktop build but I just can't be arsed with the whole thing at the moment. It's a distraction.
3d printer dispatched to arrive Wednesday. Hopefully by the end of the weekend my 1740A should have some new shoes
Also a question for the 3d printers of the thread: is it normal to end up with a house full of rolls of filament? I'm feeling I'm going to end up there at some point...
Gosh, where are you going to be able to put that then, don't tell me,... the dining room table and you're all going to be having TV dinners from now on
I did consider that but the table is too wobbly! Thus it's going to live on the fireplace hearth which is a nice solid chunk of marble on concrete. The fireplace is disconnected and the chimney sealed off (after an incident with a dead pigeon) so it's nice and safe there.
I tried a hack copy of S3D when I first got back into 3DP, and it for sure is more user-friendly and more polished. But their business model is just batshit crazy for the hobbyist; with their pricing and the number of projects most hobbyists turn out in a year, you spend more for the slice than you do for the filament.
I’ve been using Cura for a while, as it was the first to include a profile for the Tevo Tornado; though their profile for the CR-10 worked quite well out of the box. The “print preview” function is pretty crude compared to S3D and manipulating the object in the printspace is a little clunky, but otherwise it is a very capable app, with a pretty easy learning curve. All the settings have clarification and “suggestion” hover-dialogs, so it is pretty quick to self-teach. About like Windows 7.
As for Fusion360... Yeah, it does expect you to have a civilized GPU and civilized amount of RAM. It ran great on my 10-year-old AMD 1055T/16GB RAM, but kind of choked on renders until I upgraded from GeForce GT650/2GB to a Radeon RX580/8GB.
Once we get settled, I’ll see how it runs on my wife’s 6th gen i3 laptop with external monitor and let you know.
That said... I really think you’re going to be lots of time and assache ahead (on MANY fronts) if you just suck it up and go Fusion360, even if you need to do a long-overdue hardware refresh in the course thereof.
mnem
*currently packing down the living room TV*