Hi,
I ask here, because I hope, here is a better chance to get in contact than at the end of the forum.
I'm a Vray for Rhino (VfR) user and use the five year old VfR 1.05 plugin everyday several hours. My clients are happy and I have a lot of work, but over the time the project size increase, from small design projects to whole train/air plane interiors. So, often I run in the limitations of the 32bit environment, it's not easy to get heavy scenes done. The new 1.5 was strong anticipated - five years for a new release are a very long time.
After five years, this spring a new version of VfR (1.5) is released, but it doesn't match the quality of a final software, it can't be used without the risk to collapse within a project - it's the worst case for a freelance. The new plugin is a big step behind the old version (32bit only), the old one was rock solid and the UI quite well arranged.
Since the 1.5 is official released (before the bug list of the beta was cleaned) I hoped to get quick bug fixes for critical bugs within a few hours or days, so that projects can be finalized. But it looks like weeks or months are needed. So, please, dear chaosgroup teams, please try to find a way to get more power to the plugin development. Please find a way, that the development is focused to VfR, so that the progress is visible within days and not within months. From my users view it looks like the development lost the focus again and again, only a few bugs are fixed every few weeks.
If there is a way to port the old 1.05 to 64bit without getting a lot of bugs, than I could wait some years more for a new plugin version.
Sorry for the hard words, but I'm very nervous, because a big project starts soon and as I scheduled the project in the summer time, I thought, the critical bugs are fixed until autumn and I can work at 64bit. Since chaosgroup acquired ASGvis I hoped this deal is showing a positive effect for VfR users too, but for me as pro user ... I can't sleep well if I think on to use VfR 1.5 for my next project.
Regards,
Micha
I ask here, because I hope, here is a better chance to get in contact than at the end of the forum.

I'm a Vray for Rhino (VfR) user and use the five year old VfR 1.05 plugin everyday several hours. My clients are happy and I have a lot of work, but over the time the project size increase, from small design projects to whole train/air plane interiors. So, often I run in the limitations of the 32bit environment, it's not easy to get heavy scenes done. The new 1.5 was strong anticipated - five years for a new release are a very long time.
After five years, this spring a new version of VfR (1.5) is released, but it doesn't match the quality of a final software, it can't be used without the risk to collapse within a project - it's the worst case for a freelance. The new plugin is a big step behind the old version (32bit only), the old one was rock solid and the UI quite well arranged.
Since the 1.5 is official released (before the bug list of the beta was cleaned) I hoped to get quick bug fixes for critical bugs within a few hours or days, so that projects can be finalized. But it looks like weeks or months are needed. So, please, dear chaosgroup teams, please try to find a way to get more power to the plugin development. Please find a way, that the development is focused to VfR, so that the progress is visible within days and not within months. From my users view it looks like the development lost the focus again and again, only a few bugs are fixed every few weeks.
If there is a way to port the old 1.05 to 64bit without getting a lot of bugs, than I could wait some years more for a new plugin version.
Sorry for the hard words, but I'm very nervous, because a big project starts soon and as I scheduled the project in the summer time, I thought, the critical bugs are fixed until autumn and I can work at 64bit. Since chaosgroup acquired ASGvis I hoped this deal is showing a positive effect for VfR users too, but for me as pro user ... I can't sleep well if I think on to use VfR 1.5 for my next project.

Regards,
Micha
Comment