- Mon May 02, 2005 9:09 pm
#21056
Well, lets just compare render engines, not 3D software, and compare render engines that allow the same functionality as Maxwell. Dream Scape and Speed tree are out. It's not like you're going to do an architectural visualisation using the renderers provided in Dreamscape or Speedtree.
I was looking at Brazil, and they have 4 rendernode licenses for 750. They say 4 computers. I don't know if by that they actually mean cpu's. If they mean computers then you would have twice the available cpu's to render with Brazil if all you have are dual machines.
About Mentalray, I don't understand anything about their license schemes, it's so complicated and mixed up....and I can't find any price quotes either...
I think Vray offers you ten computers per license for distributed rendering (several computer working on ONE image), so you could have 20 processors per license, 5 times more than Maxwell.
On the other hand, if I had the money to buy 10 dual machines, and I thought Maxwell offers an edge, and less headaches than other renderers, I would still consider it at it's present price...
Final render gives you 10 cpu's, so 2.5 times more than Maxwell.
It's difficult to tell how developers price these things, what markets they think it will be used in and so on...
Obviously to become somewhat productive with it you need at least 2 dual machines, and that is what Maxwell is offering at the moment. With 8 processors working on an image you would certainly be productive with it. Plus in a few months we'll have dualcores.
jackb602, can C4D's renderer do network distributed rendering? That is, each computer in the network works on one part of the image? Or can it just assign different frames to different machines? I've seen that it can split up a render between the available cpu's on one machine, but I don't know if it can do it over a network.
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