I'm planning to load Blender to my Win7 computer since my copy of Autodesk 3DSMax is incompatible with Win7. It looks like I meet all the minimum system requirements, except for one I'm not sure about. I need at least a "32-bit dual core 2Ghz CPU with SSE2 support" to run Blender. I have an AMD E300 APU, and looking it up tells me that it has 64-bit AMD technology in it, but with only 1.3 Ghz. So is the 64-bit tech enough to qualify it, or is the 1.3 Ghz a problem? Here are my other specs, in case that somehow makes up for it: Required (minimum): 32-bit dual core 2Ghz CPU with SSE2 support 2 GB RAM 24 bits 1280×768 display OpenGL-compatible graphics card with 256 MB RAM I Have: AMD E300 APU 4 GB RAM 1366x768 display (How do I find the "bits" for this?) AMD Radeon HD 6310 with 256 MB RAM
The CPU will qualify on all aspects but speed, and that will mean your models(when they are complex) will chug as you move them. It'll run, just not very smoothly
Damn that program is over 3 grand and 2 grand for an upgrade. That is a lot money. Whew. I can understand why he doesn't want a computer that is too new.
Me neither. But let some people tell it and you'll think that that's what Autodesk wants you to do. Hook you in with student copies of their software then, when you're good and practiced with it and ready to move into professional work, you'll have no choice but to purchase a proper license. Again, I don't like lying. But some things just don't have free alternatives in the end.
That's actually how I got my copy; got it through one of my college classes. But in order to make anything for profit that involves anything I make through the program, I'd need to buy a license, which IIR is stupidly expensive. =/ Also, my copy is the 2010 edition, which from what I've read on the Autodesk site won't run on Win7, which is why I'm opting for Blender. The speed thing sounds like it'll be an issue, but then again I ran into similar problems when I was running Max on my XP computer, which led to a lot of annoying graphical hiccups. =P Is there by chance any way I can externally improve my processor speed without overclocking it or taking my computer apart?
Most people are running 2010 on Win 7 fine. Its not "officially" supported because it came out while Win7 was still in beta. And no, you cant accelerate the CPU without either OC or replacing it altogether(if thats even possible). Post what error is 3ds max 2010 giving you when you try to run/install it.