I recently got the Microsoft Surface Book with its beautiful 3000x2000 resolution screen for school and predominantly Solidworks, the laptop is great but my experience using Solidworks on it has been rather terrible.I tried for a week to troubleshoot the tiny UI of solidworks on my laptop without drastically increasing the size of everything else on my computer until I found this tutorial by Dan Antonielli. This seemed to fix every problem I was having with solidworks, I can actually read the text and see the buttons without having my desktop icons the size of ping-pong balls.Except, Solidworks seems to created a whole new problem which makes using it the most frustrating thing in the word! Every time I click somewhere in the work area or the Design tree a duplicate image of the screen occurs inside the work space , even drawing a simple sketch produces a seizure inducing and disorienting experience as the work space flashes and jumps around and as you can imagine this is incredibly frustrating and work limiting.Are there any fixes to this that don't involve changing any of the DPI settings or scaling options? I'm desperate for anything!P.s. Running Solidworks Student Edition pro 2015-2016 on Windows 10. Time to vent.
We have the exact same problem at my company with SWX16 premium sp02, win10 on dell laptops with Quadro graphics + high res screens, all latest drivers. Talked to upper tier business support at Dell recently, and Dell's official position is that Windows 10 is not ready for prime time, the M3800 is not appropriate for running high performance software, and they will not support this application. Talked to upper tier support at our VAR and SWX, and they say it's a Dell/NVidia/Win10 problem and that they will not support this configuration, even though it is listed as approved. Basically I have hundreds of thousands of dollars of software and hardware pointing fingers at each other and a lot of pissed off engineers.I've noticed that if I boot the computer with no external monitor connected, it works until I connect an external monitor. Conversely, if I boot it with an external monitor connected, it works until I disconnect it. The only really solid way I've found to fix the problem is to run on a desktop that uses Win7 with a mid-resolution (2560x1600) monitor. Sorry I don't have a great solution for you.
We're on the same sports team/in the same club.No, although I wish I could see her more.I occasionally see her walking home or something, but other than that, no.7)How well do you know her?I know her really well. Does she like me. We hang out and we're good friends.I see her a lot. We don't talk.4)When you talk to her, does she look into your eyes?Yeah, pretty much every time we talk.Most of the time, although she lowers her gaze and stares at the ground after a few seconds.Occasionally, it depends on what we're talking about.No, she doesn't look at me, she stares at the floor or her hands.She doesn't talk to me.5)Do her pupils get larger when you talk to her? 'How was your day today?' (If you don't know, study her eyes next time you talk!)Yeah, I thought it was a bit odd.I really don't bother to check.I can't tell, she never looks me in the eyes.We don't talk.6)Do you ever see her outside of school?Yeah, I see her a lot!
I've been trying to solve this robustly for my teams for months, but I continue to be disappointed. If anyone here has any ideas, I would love to chat.Someone mentioned SW openGL. That crap sucks.
It's fine for super simple models, but it's a tragedy to have to run that way. This may be down to graphics support on the MS Surface.
Although a great device they don't have a certified graphics card. I've seen issues exactly like you showed on systems with non supported 'gamimg' or on-board cards. Try turning on 'Use Software OpenGL' in system options under performance. This will use emulation for the graphics and might help.Another one is that Windows 10 is only supported from SW 2015 Service Pack 5 of the commercial release. You are running an Educational version that is probably based on an older version. I think he is referring to what is mentioned in this.By disabling the display scaling on High DPI settings, what I've observed is that it will keep the large scale, but not scale for other monitors.For instance, I have a Surface Pro 3, with that screen as a primary, and 2 additional 1080p monitors attached.
I have DPI scaling to 150%. On my primary screen, it looks normal, but on my secondary screens all the icons and interface are gigantic. Though using Solidworks 2016 Pro without display scaling disabled works fine on my primary screen.I suppose if you're at 100% scaling, this may not work. Are icons and text for other programs this small as well?.
The rains of spring will be gone, and the heat of summer will be here soon. But what to do on those rainy summer days? Get some learning in!! There are some training opportunities still out there to get you on your path to a successful and efficient SOLIDWORKS summer. Below you will find some helpful links to get you on your way.First off there is always training live in our classrooms and our virtual training. Click this link to find CATI live training in your area:For CATI live instructor-led virtual training click this link:You can also connect with a CATI Training Advisor to help you choose courses and register by clicking the “Talk to a Training Advisor” button on any of our training related web pages.Looking for some free training? Try My.SOLIDWORKS.COM training. Gti racing cd key download.
There are tons of free lessons and e-courses. Some lessons may require an active subscription, some will require my.solidworks.com pro subscription. The e-courses are paid courses with virtual instructors.
Click the link below to login and start today!Maybe you just want to hang out and do some networking? Ore vaanam ore bhoomi tamil mp3 songs. How about hitting up a SOLIDWORKS user group?
Solidworks For High School Ohio
Click the below link to find your local user’s group and get connected with SOLIDWORKS users in your area and maybe some free pizzaEnjoy your summer!John Van EngenSupport Team Leader.