- Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc update#
- Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc trial#
- Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc free#
- Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc windows#
Then compared the new log file with the old one and the following is the log file entry for that try.
Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc update#
To troubleshoot the problem, I made a copy of the WindowsUpdate.log file, and tried to run an update through the control panel (the update window just sits there forever). I should also add that the update facility has not worked properly on this system for quite some time. So I disabled autoupdates and the problem went away.
Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc windows#
Inside the svchost process, the culprit turned out to be Wuaueng.dll, the Windows autoupdate code. When I investigated this further, I discovered thatnan svchost process was gobbling up 50-70% of the CPU cycles.
The system frequently crawled to a halt and had to be forcefully shut down and rebooted.
This thread was marked as Assumed Answered, but I think we can get some milage out of it yet, so I cancelled it.I hope you can help with this.I am running Win 7 ultimate 圆4 on a Lenovo T61p.
Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc free#
I supect you'd still need to do some fine tuning because of the way type layers behave with Free Transform, but a practiced 'eyecrometer' would be close enough. If you made the spiral in a group below the numerals, and were working at a scale similar to the above, S&R would position and scale the numberals, so that you could then rotate each one individually (-30°, -60°, -90° etc.). The non rotating numerals work well, and I am not seeing an wutomatic method of achieving that with Step & Repeat. I wonder if it is a 3D render or pure illustration? I prefer the perspective effect of ever reducing size, and I love the 3D effect of the iStock image complete with shading. I love that the numerals align, but that's going to be a consequence of the steps always being held at 30° even as the size reduces. If I was doing it for real, I think I'd be aiming for something like this iStock version - the OP did ask about an Infite Clock after all. It would be an interesting project, but a few hours work to do nicely. Then you'd need to clean up the spiral with the pen tool and make it a coninuous band on one layer. There's no problem with layer order, so fairly easy. There is another way that does work, and that's to lay down the type layers separately. I rasterized the type and background segments to do the above. Then you just need to open each SO in a new window by double clicking, and change the number. Sometimes restarting Photoshop and going straigt into the process makles it work. I am sure this used to work with Step & Repeat in older versions, but I find it unreliable now. To make this work without too much trouble, you need to make the background segment and type layer into a Smart Object. But like I said at the beginning, there's a problem. Now use Shift Ctrl Alt T as many times as you need to repeat the pattern, which produces something like my first screen shot.
Filter forge 5 crashes photoshop cc trial#
You'll need to use trial and error for the size reduction, and -30° is the angle between clock numerals. We Alt click to place the centre handle at the guide intersection, and then make the X: and Y: fields zero. So we copy the first layer, and Free Transfor it thus: That lets place the rotation point in exactly the right place. Place the centre guides and drag out the grid to the intersection. There's a wee trick we use to make it accurate. I should have made my segment cover a little more than 30° to overlap the repeating layers. I don't know if you know how step & repeat works, but you make the first layer like so. This is rough and ready to make the point, and there is a bit of a problem. I don't know of any plugin, but you could maybe use Free Transform Step & Repeat. I'm amazed this has gone so long without an answer.