Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 21 6:06 am)
Yes. There's info at the Smith-Micro site on this. Renders will complete in almost half the time as a duo-core system.
My visual indexes of Poser
content are at http://www.sharecg.com/pf/rgagnon
I have Poser 5 and it appears that it too uses all four cpu's. I started the program and monitored the action on the performance screen of my task manager. In fact everything on the computer uses all four. Even when completed, all four has some activity. Could be wrong-still learning my new computer. Jan
You don't have to check the Separate Process box.
Separate Process is a little slower than in-process, since it requires process-to-process communication, with quite a lot of data to be transferred.
An advantage of rendering in a separate process is the fact that it can render more complex scenes than the Poser in-process renderer, due to the fact that this separate process does not have the overhead of a user interface - it's the render engine, a little bit of communication logic, and that's it.
The pen is mightier than the sword. But if you literally want to have some impact, use a typewriter
I was surprised that the manual said that a duo core processor will also realize gains by using four threads. It also recommends checking Separate Processes for complex scenes, but doesn't make much effort to define what a complex scene is.
My visual indexes of Poser
content are at http://www.sharecg.com/pf/rgagnon
Quote - I was surprised that the manual said that a duo core processor will also realize gains by using four threads. It also recommends checking Separate Processes for complex scenes, but doesn't make much effort to define what a complex scene is.
I think how complex the scene need to be varies with how much memory your machine has.
My older machine (2meg) used to crash fairly often without render as a seperate process but my 4 meg laptop works either way.
You do need to enable the Separate Process setting in order to fully utilize multiple cores. The main Poser executable is a single-threaded 32-bit application and though your operating system will spread the work across multiple cores, Poser will not be able to fully utilize the processing capacity of multiple cores because it only supports a single thread. FFRender.exe supports multi-threading and will fully utilize multiple cores.
Also, regarding setting the number of threads to 4 with a dual core processor: This only improves performance when the processor supports Hyper-Threading. Old Pentium 4 dual core processor and the new i7 processors from Intel support Hyper-Threading. Core 2 Duo processors do not.
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Will Poser utilize a quad core processor? I know it does great with dual core but don't know about quad.