2006-11-09 06:22 AM
2006-11-09 07:30 AM
Karl wrote:well. i figured i'd give it a go with winXPpro running through parallels on OSX . . . just for giggles.
Feel free to post some before/after times in this thread...😉
2006-11-09 11:41 AM
2006-11-10 06:20 PM
2006-11-10 07:36 PM
~/archiben wrote:OK... so this tip is for WINDOWS users, on typical Windows hardware, not MacIntel users in Parallels or Bootcamp. Typical Windows hardware has physical LPT and COM ports - which do not exist on Mac hardware, even if simulated. The search of these additional hardware ports seems to be part of the problem.Karl wrote:well. i figured i'd give it a go with winXPpro running through parallels on OSX . . . just for giggles.
Feel free to post some before/after times in this thread...😉
first launch of archicad on starting windows took approx. 50 seconds. each subsequent launch of archicad took a little under 7 seconds. is there some kind of remembered port that stays valid during a windows session?
next i tried to find the WIBU key control panel. no dice. thinking that the control panel itself may not be installed i went to WIBU's website and downloaded the latest driver version - 5.10 - and ran the installer.
still no WIBU control panel. i'm thinking it's going to be under "Printers and Other Hardware" right? it being 'other hardware' and all that. nah. "Performance and Maintainance"? nope. eventually i find it hidden away to the side in a small "Other Options" link.
perfect. so i open it up. i looks nothing like yours karl. (how do i make a simple screenshot in windows?)
anyways. launching archicad after all of that rigmarole still maintained the 7 second time . . .
someone help this simple mac user, please?!
~/archiben
2006-11-11 12:07 AM
2006-11-11 12:52 AM
Jefferson wrote:Nice speedup, Jeff! A single-user USB keyplug cannot allow more than one user to use it at the same time - only network plugs do that. I assume that a single-user plug can be accessed over the network - but haven't tried - to permit one workstation at a time to run AC.
Only question I have is in regard to the WIKI instructions regarding a network key. This doesn't mean that plugging my key into my USB server would allow more than one computer to run AC simultaneously over my small network? Not that it would be possible for a one-man-show like me to make use of this, but it does beg the question, stupid or not.
2006-11-11 01:01 AM
2006-11-11 01:42 AM
Jefferson wrote:and imagine the frustration when you discover your 10-user key was plugged into one of the four machines that was stolen the night before . . . we were not amused . . .
Pity the fellow/CAD manager that can't remember where he put it!
2006-11-15 10:56 PM
and imagine the frustration when you discover your 10-user key was plugged into one of the four machines that was stolen the night before . . . we were not amused . . .sounds like the Pommy quotient is still alive and well