However, it didn’t take long, thanks to the word of mouth and the visibility that the V-Ray book gave me. It was not easy, especially because I had to introduce my studio to potential clients. However, Render Legion has revamped the Corona Renderer website (it’s still an ongoing work, apparently), and launched a new support portal, so visible progress is being made.What have you been up to since the V-Ray Guide?Īfter writing the world’s first book for V-Ray (2008), my adventure as a freelancer began, leaving my comfortable 3D graphic job in Milan. Of course, that raises the big question: when is Corona officially going to be released? Originally scheduled for November, the current status (as of 23 January) is “no exact date yet … but as soon as possible”. It’s licensed for commercial use, and isn’t time-limited or feature-locked – but it is provided ‘as is’, so don’t expect bug fixes or support. Originally released in March 2014, Alpha 6 is a pretty generous choice for a perpetually free licence, since it’s the update that added distributed rendering, along with save/resume rendering and the physical camera. Developer Render Legion has just announced that Alpha 6 of the production renderer will remain free forever, and licensed for commercial use.Īlpha 6 of Corona Renderer for 3ds Max will remain free forever, even after the software has officially been released, developer Render Legion has announced.Īlso available as a standalone app and a Cinema 4D version, the much-anticipated Corona is a fast, production-capable CPU-based biased/unbiased renderer. Posted by Jim Thacker Get a permanent free copy of Corona Renderer for MaxĪn overview of Corona Renderer for 3ds Max Alpha 6, recorded for Max Cookie.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |