een shot and there are two pull down menus of PT. The left if clicked shows the older version and works fine, but when the right menu is clicked the software freezes and crashes.
In my PC, Rhino 5 32 bit and 64 bit are installed and Rhino 4 as well. Just for your info.
Thanks.
…
nstalling of 3 previous versions of Ladybird and Honeybee but nothing different happened. This was all happening on a desktop PC running windows 10 and with a wired connection to the internet router (via a switch). I then tried installing Ladybug and Honeybee on a MacBook Pro running Windows 7 on bootcamp. This computer was wirellesly connected to the same router. The installation of the latest version was very smooth and all the right files of the right sizes appeared without any problem on the first import of Honeybee-Honeybee. I then copied the files over to the other computer. Solved.
1. good thing I didn't know that as I wouldn't have kept on trying to resolve it!
2. Ok, sticking with it - besides I would hate miss out on such a major release!
3. Makes sense.
4. ok, I thought that that was the main file because of the EP in the title - I now have them both anyway.
5. Now that you say this when I click on the file in github and download it from the view raw link then I do get the right file size. But when I have been trying to download it directly from the root folder (i.e.Honeybee/resources) with "save link as" then I get the 36kB. Could it be that Honeybee_Honeybee was doing something similar?
Many thanks again to both of you - great work out there!
best,
Alex…
ing basic concepts for personalization in footwear design and fabrication in order to send afterwards to CNCs, laser cutting equipment, 3D printers, etc.
Note: Previous knowledge in Rhinoceros and footwear design is not necessary.Content:1. Personalization in footwear upper(Working with a digital shape from a 3D scan)2. Shoe sole creation3. Using Grasshopper to create women's heels4. Nesting and using the work area5. Basic programming for a mold and/or a mock-up for CNC - RhinoCAM
Requirements: 1 PC or LaptopSoftware: Punto3D, provided by a CD which includes necessary demo programs, as well as the files that will be used for the session. Rhinoceros 5.0 for WindowsGrasshopperRhinoCAM 2014RhinoNEST 2014NOTE: You have to bring your own computer with Rhino 5 installed.
Register:
http://www.mcneelmiami.com/inc/sdetail/1727
//
Diseño y fabricación digital de Calzado
Lugar: Sala Ejecutiva 4
Precio: $95.00 USD
Idioma de curso: Español
Profesor: José de Jesús López Martínez. Punto3D, ART (Authorized Rhino Trainer)
Descripción: Compartir conceptos básicos para la personalización de cortes de calzado y el diseño de accesorios. Para su posterior envío a dispositivos como CNC's, equipos de corte láser, impresoras 3D, entre otros. Nota: No es necesario tener conocimientos previos de Rhinoceros, ni de diseño de calzado.
Contenido:
1. Personalización de corte de calzado (Trabajo sobre horma digital, la cual proviene de un escaneado 3D)
2. Creación de una suela
3. Grasshopper para la creación de un tacón para calzado de dama
4. Nesting y el aprovechamiento de áreas de trabajo
5. Programación básica de un molde y/o maqueta para CNC – RhinoCAM
Requisitos: 1 PC o Laptop
Software: Punto3D, proveerá un CD que incluirá los programas Demos necesarios, así como los archivos para trabajar en la sesión
Rhinoceros 5.0 para Windows
Grasshopper
RhinoCAM 2014
RhinoNEST 2014
NOTA: Tienes que llevar tu computador con Rhino 5 ya instalado
Regístrate:
http://www.mcneelmiami.com/inc/sdetail/1727…
with this machine.
As Jason says, Rhino and Grasshopper are mainly single-threaded, so I prioritized single core speed and got an i7 4790k, which comfortably overclocks to 4.7GHz (with a decent air cooler, but no fancy liquid cooling).
The Kangaroo2 solver is actually multi-threaded now, but the difference this makes is not great as you might imagine. Using 4 cores is certainly nowhere near 4 times faster, because although parts of the calculation are easily parallelized, everything still needs to be recombined at each iteration, and this is usually the bottleneck. I think there is still room for some improvement in how it is multi-threaded, but I wouldn't hold your breath for any massive changes on this front soon.
I'd be interested to know how the performance scales with the Xeon chips (more cores, significantly more expensive, but relatively low clock speeds). At the time I made the guess that they weren't worth it, but it would be good to really test this out.
RAM is relatively cheap these days, so I went with 32GB of it at 2133MHz. It does seem that the speed of the RAM matters, as enabling XMP in the BIOS (to make it run above the default 1333) seemed to make a noticeable difference.
Graphics-wise my personal feeling is that the gaming oriented GTX cards offer better value than the much more expensive 'professional' Quadro range - and have read that the hardware between the 2 has historically been very similar or even identical despite the Quadros being several times the price, with the difference being mainly in the drivers. There are some threads on discourse.mcneel.com about this, and it seems that recent GTX cards like the 970 do very well in Holomark (the Rhino performance benchmarking tool).
I got a GTX 770 (this was just before the 900 series came out), which is probably way overkill just for Rhino/Grasshopper, as they don't use the GPU for more than display (Though some of the render plugins do, and I think for those more CUDA cores is what matters, so there GTX is probably still better value.)
Probably swapping this for a much cheaper card wouldn't make much difference to Rhino/GH performance anyway (though if you want to use the PC for other stuff like gaming or virtual reality it does).
I don't have much experience with AMD cards, so can't comment on how they compare to Nvidia.
Eventually I do hope to make Kangaroo run the physics on the GPU, and potentially this does have a big speed impact. Nvidia recently released some impressive demos of their FLEX engine, which really fly with a decent graphics card. That is very much game-physics, and not suitable for most of the things Kangaroo is used for, but theoretically Kangaroo could also be adapted to use CUDA (or OpenCL), though it involves a lot of big changes, and I don't have a timeline for this yet.
In the much shorter term there are some things in the pipeline that should speed up Kangaroo for certain things like collisions between large numbers of objects, just by using some different algorithms.
Altogether my machine was still well under €2K, and I've been really happy with it. That said, the difference in performance between this and my 4 year old €700 i5 laptop is actually not that huge in day-to-day Grasshopper usage. It does seem that there is a strong case of diminishing returns with buying a PC - I'd hazard a guess that even spending 3 times this amount (as another thread on this forum was discussing recently) you'd be hard pushed to get anything that made a really significant difference to the experience of using it, and if you really want to spend more money, you would be better off just upgrading more frequently (and getting a nice monitor(s)).
Anyway, a long ramble, I hope some of it is useful. As I said, I'm no hardware expert, and would be interested to hear different opinions.
I also think it will be nice to make a simple benchmarking tool for Kangaroo and have people run it on their various machines and report back results (as with Holomark), to help others make informed decisions on these things. I'll try and put something together for this soon.
…
e of them are easy to fix and relate to library Grizzlybear not sure:
2. I have problem and do not know how to apply different construction Floors: to GroundFloor, exposed floor?
…
e of the 3rd solution.Do not be confused by the additional division of the initial PV surfaces (yellow group label: "divided PV surfaces"). This is to more accurately account for their self shading.The attached .gh file takes a little bit more to execute everything, so I internalized some of the results, and the final result also.Feel free to change something in definition (for example try using a bit larger tilt angle, instead of the optimal one) but be prepared to wait a little bit, before everything is executed. I labeled with green group color the steps I have been using. If you have a bit stronger PC configuration, you only need to internalize once ("2 internalize" label). If not do the steps that that I did.Have a great weekend!…
is: "C:\Program Files\MapWinGIS" then the command would like:
regsvr32 "C:\Program Files\MapWinGIS\mapwingis.ocx"
Restart your Rhino and Grasshopper and try running Gismo then.
If first method does not work, try:2) Add Environmental variable as: both "user variable" and "system variable".
The variable should be: "GDAL_DATA", and its Value should be: "yourMapWinGiS_installation_folder\gdal-data".
For example, for upper installation folder, it will be:
"C:\Program Files\MapWinGIS\gdal-data"
Restart your PC! Then run Rhino and Grasshopper again.
Please let us know, if nothing of this is works.…
t load the recent EP material lib updated with honeybee last version
which includes different thicknesses other than 3mm clear glassI have these loaded to my laptop version.
any idea how to fix it? 2- I need to know the reference for climate zones numbering in the EP cons. Lb. especially when it comes to CIBSE default materials.
how can I know which climate zone I'm working on according to the CIBSE and ASHAREA codes so, I can assign the materials accordingly?
thank you in advance
regards
anas
…
rk for Rhino, this is a first go at a very simple tool to get an idea of how fast different computers are at performing the sort of calculations used in Kangaroo, with the aim of informing those buying or upgrading their machines.
If you could take a couple of minutes to download and run this definition (after closing other running applications), then post here the result and your PC specs, hopefully we can start building a basic picture of what effect different hardware really has on the speed Kangaroo runs.
Most of the information can be found in the System page of Control Panel.
RAM speed can be checked in your BIOS, or with a tool like CPU-Z (note that the reported frequency from this should be doubled to get the actual RAM speed rating - eg if the frequency is 800MHz you should write DDR3-1600. It's confusing I know - see some discussion of this here), or by searching online for the specs of your PC model number.
This definition is purely testing the speed of the internal physics calculation, not display, so graphics-cards are irrelevant.
For now this is just to get a single general measure of overall Kangaroo speed, but it might also be interesting later to run a variety of tests to see how the speed varies with the size and complexity of simulation.
Of course a way of benchmarking general Grasshopper performance would be very nice to have as well, but would involve a lot more variables, and I'd be interested if anyone has ideas about how that could work.
Note - I posted a couple of versions of this earlier with various errors that were causing incorrect results. If you downloaded the earlier KangaMark01.gh or KangaMark02.gh file, please disregard that and any results from it and use the one posted here below:…
you post a screenshot of what the message coming from its readMe! output looks like?2) Close your Grasshopper and Rhino.3) Download "Revo Uninstaller Pro" from here. It is free for first 30 days, which is what we need.4) Right click on the RevoUninProSetup.exe and check if the file is blocked. If it is, unblock it.5) Run the RevoUninProSetup.exe file and install "Revo Uninstaller Pro".6) Uninstall "MapWinGIS" with "Revo Uninstaller Pro". It is important that "Revo Uninstaller Pro" deletes not only files from MapWinGIS installation folder, but also all other leftovers (as registry inputs). Here is a small tutorial on how to do that. Watch it from 6:10 till the end.7) Restart your PC8) When your Windows boots up, make sure that you are logged in as Administrator!9) In your Start menu's search box type: "UAC", which will find your User Account Control Settings. Click on it, and a new window will open. Set the bar on the left to "Never notify".10) Turn off your Windows Firewall.11) Then turn off your custom Firewall (in case you have another one, besides standard Windows Firewall).12) Completely turn off your Antivirus.13) Download again the MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe.exe file from here.14) Right click on the MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe file and see if it is blocked. If it is, unblock it.15) Right click on MapWinGIS-only-v4.9.4.2-x64.exe file and choose: "Run as"... Administrator.16) One the installation preparation steps start, choose "Full installation". Wait for the MapWinGIS installation to finish.17) Right-click on "Rhino 5" icon and then choose: "Run as administrator".18) Open the the ironpython_admin.gh file again, and again post a screenshot of the message coming from its readMe! output.19) Drop the "Gismo Gismo" component to Grasshopper canvas. Post a screenshot of the message coming out from its readMe! output.
So we will need in total three screenshots of the readMe! output messages.
Thank you once again for being patient, and sorry for the large number of steps.…
Added by djordje to Gismo at 1:52am on April 9, 2017