Blender 4.0
#1
Posted 09 November 2023 - 05:03 AM
I have only tested with the Beta release... but there should be no changes next week when Blender 4.0 gets relased officially.
I do recommend that people stick with the LTS releases of Blender though...
#2
Posted 14 November 2023 - 07:57 AM
Due to driver issues, support for Intel HD4000 series GPUs has been dropped.
There goes my idea of running Blender on a Intel NUC. But I will see if that has been completely broken. Not having a supported GPU slows things down in Blender, but it would still run. Not having to use an Nvidia 4090 to do basic CAD/Modelling is still of value in my opinion. Low power/heat options, in the heat of the summer makes this interest doable.
I still have yet to comprehend EXACTLY what levels of backwards compatibility are built into the code for older .blend files which is truly sad. So much work has to be redone when "importing" older .blend work. Why there is no conversion unit is beyond me.
Something to explore, when I have the time and health to do it with.
For those who are given to do so, take a look at some of the Hacker News: https://news.ycombin...tem?id=38262315
With the recent musings for updating OR with payed developers, the history of Blender is in stark contrast. All of that because the user base is so much larger.
Steve
#3
Posted 14 November 2023 - 10:16 AM
Quote
Thats really a shame... new features and improvements are coming at a really rapid pace.
Are you needing to always downgrade blend files from newer to older versions? Which version are you stuck at?
#4
Posted 14 November 2023 - 04:46 PM
pwillard, on 14 November 2023 - 10:16 AM, said:
Are you needing to always downgrade blend files from newer to older versions? Which version are you stuck at?
NUC's are discontinued now - were all of them stuck on the 4400 graphics, or did some of the more recent GPU's?
Looking at https://en.wikipedia...hics_Technology
it looks as if the 4400 is quite old, released 10 years back.
I'll assume you've checked your NUC and you have a 4400, but if not, it could be worth checking.
#5 Inactive_Hidetoshi6721_*
Posted 16 November 2023 - 06:15 AM
Eldorado.Railroad, on 14 November 2023 - 07:57 AM, said:
Due to driver issues, support for Intel HD4000 series GPUs has been dropped.
There goes my idea of running Blender on a Intel NUC. But I will see if that has been completely broken. Not having a supported GPU slows things down in Blender, but it would still run. Not having to use an Nvidia 4090 to do basic CAD/Modelling is still of value in my opinion. Low power/heat options, in the heat of the summer makes this interest doable.
I still have yet to comprehend EXACTLY what levels of backwards compatibility are built into the code for older .blend files which is truly sad. So much work has to be redone when "importing" older .blend work. Why there is no conversion unit is beyond me.
Something to explore, when I have the time and health to do it with.
For those who are given to do so, take a look at some of the Hacker News: https://news.ycombin...tem?id=38262315
With the recent musings for updating OR with payed developers, the history of Blender is in stark contrast. All of that because the user base is so much larger.
Steve
Honestly speaking, I hate the compatibility policy too. Hope someone makes an add-on for that. The only way right now is to either have Blender 3.6.x LTS only and miss on the latest features, or get both Blender 4 and 3.6.x LTS, needing unnecessary storage space.
#6
Posted 17 November 2023 - 09:35 AM
#7
Posted 04 December 2023 - 05:55 PM
Thanks
Brandon
#8
Posted 05 December 2023 - 02:27 AM
The conversion is via 3DCrafter, which can import .dst files from TSM.
Then in 3DCrafter, the model is exported to .3ds (3dstudio format), which can be imported by Blender.
Things like animations and texturing will need to be done again, and I had to re-scale the whole model by a factor of ten.
If you would like to PM me, I would be happy to try and convert a model for you.
Geoff
#9
Posted 06 December 2023 - 07:28 PM
Brandon
Screenshot 2023-12-06 205703.jpg (314.81K)
Number of downloads: 16
#10
Posted 07 December 2023 - 03:56 AM