Corona Renderer for Sketchup
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Look, I like what I see... nice images. I didn't tried it, but I believe all the users saying it's fast and simple. But, from my humble experience with rendering beautiful and believable images,you can't just have this kind of crazy beautiful output, from the engine alone. I see amazing materials as well, and boy, these can't be simplified. If the material editor is intuitive, simple, or at least similar with competition, then yes, it looks like a winner!
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You can't download it yet, but Beta testing is open and invite only. If someone can point me to a high quality modelled skp scene, I can use it to test it right out of the box - ie. press render immediately without any materials reflections or bumps set up (doesn't have that feature yet because the SU team on board is fresh and still sorting out these features I believe, and Corona has always tethered of the basic functions of Max / Blender including the material editors). Will post the results here, it normally displays the timings as well on my old and slow machine.
If you want to be a beta tester you can sign up on their forum which I won't link to from here.
srx, thanks I'm downloading the trial to try it out, and will feedback to you my thoughts and feelings on it.
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That is impressive!
You should really look at Thea! Really!
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And the next step would be to also release it for the mac... I did download the corona benchmark and ran it under virtual box+win10. It was quite fast I must say. Ah well, still waiting for Vray 3 for SU.....
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@pilou said:
Seems scattering is the new paradigm of all today renderers!
http://getskatter.com/ here specially for SU!By the way, Corona already supports Skatter
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So skatter Power 2?
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@solo said:
I am skeptical of any claims out there that challenge Thea on speed, not happened yet.
This.
GPU presto Thea absolutely crushes the competition.
Plus surely output is only as good as the person using it, Corona won't suddenly make your bad texturing into superb renders.
Same as any other renderer as far as I can tell, just another on the block to dilute the render pool. CPU only is a major flaw these days. -
as Pete Said. . .in the right hands many render engines can create amazing results.
With Thea. . .even a hack...er ahem .. novice.. . like me can get some pretty good results. Imagine what i can do in the hands of you Rendering wizards. Corona looks great too, but . I think its superpowers would be wasted on me.
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Ok, I done a short trial run of Thea, I'm sorry but I am not convinced, as it is somewhat too slow in rendering and the interface is a little too convoluted for my tastes. Much prefer Podium's interface and Twilight's simplicity. Still sticking to Twilight for now...
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@spadestick said:
Ok, I done a short trial run of Thea, I'm sorry but I am not convinced, as it is somewhat too slow in rendering and the interface is a little too convoluted for my tastes. Much prefer Podium's interface and Twilight's simplicity. Still sticking to Twilight for now...
This is strange. Thea is fastest rendering engine at the moment, comparing to Maxwell, Vray, Corona... Twilight and Podium are not even in its league. (Twilight is based on old KerkyTHEA engine from the same creator as Thea and was not developing at least for 5 years now).
What engine did you used when doing your short trial run?
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https://www.thearender.com/site/index.php/downloads
Windows
download-line
Thea Render v1.5.04.1413 Installer 67.1MbRequirements: Windows Vista/7/8/10, SSE2 CPU
Presto GPU (included) Requirements: Nvidia CUDA graphics card (Compute Capability 2.0 or bigger) -
quick test scenes one is Thea... the other one is twilight at the exact same time for cooking... 4min 34seconds.
do note that my PC has no CUDA or GPU. It's onboard graphics due to its laptop nature (it's a Mac Mini running Windows 7)
Both set on unbiased render. You can see the obvious difference.
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I'm not doubting Thea's potential or reasons why it's so popular here. It's just that I'm probably the super impatient type and cannot wait for instant renders. Perhaps I should personally invest in a proper and real workstation after all. The office recently spent Euro$10k on the 3D Max / VRAY machine. It renders like a true workhorse able to pump out a forest in minutes. When we get to that stage of speed, I start to believe that photorealism matters, and that's where some renderers are better than others. I kind of stumbled into Corona after reading this blog post :
http://theambitiousoutsider.blogspot.com/2014/10/vray-vs-corona.html
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I'm guessing you used TR1 in Thea, try Presto MC, you'll be surprised
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@unknownuser said:
do note that my PC has no CUDA or GPU. It's onboard graphics due to its laptop nature (it's a Mac Mini running Windows 7)
And there lays the problem, in the age of electricity you are still using steam, the problem is not the software but rather your hardware, Thea is using the new technology available, it uses both CPU and GPU.
Feel free to share the scene and I will see what 1 minute using Presto MC produces
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The best thing in Corona is it whips up the competitor
http://www.v-ray.com/features/sp3/ -
A basic material editor has been added to the beta. Worth a shot, CPU renders are insanely fast
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So, what ever happened to Corona render for Sketchup? I hear crickets.
Are the dev team on these forums? if no, why not? Are they serious about getting Corona into SU?
I'm ready to test it, I have seen some awesome stuff with 3ds Max version.
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I read somewhere on their forum recently that they have hired a dedicated programmer and was waiting for him to get started.
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