There is maybe one last way to have everyone’s interface look more or less the same… Teach full-screen only and have everyone type all commands. I think trying to create a more Mac-like interface in Windows Rhino will not help much, you can do some small mods to make it look a bit more mac-friendly, but cannot fundamentally change how the Windows Rhino interface works - any more than you can change the way Mac Rhino works. Going the other way (teaching with a Mac OS running on Windows) is as you well know not possible - well maybe it is possible via a VM, I have no idea. I do this currently with my modelmaker apprentice classes, but most of them have Windows at work anyway, even if they have Mac at home. The alternative is actually to force Mac people to use the Windows version via Bootcamp or even Parallels/VM) and teach the class on Windows Rhino - the Mac people will learn Rhino at least, then they will just have to get used to the Mac interface later. I was lucky to have a university lecture hall equipped with a dual-input beamer system, so I brought my PC and my Mac and did alternate exercises on each one. That being said, I have had to teach mixed classes - there are a couple of ways to go, but some of them depend on resources you have. Anyway I didn’t win on that one, so here we are. I argued back in 2007 when Mac development started that this would be a nightmare for teachers and anyone else who is working in a mixed environment - which currently is way more than the ‘few isolated cases’ originally argued - plus it also means doubling a large number of training resources, tutorials etc. If you want to share your license across multiple computers, add your license to the Cloud Zoo instead.The issue is that the interface of the 2 versions are quite different (listening to my student) and they get confused while I teach them the other version. Simply remove it from the old one and install it on the new one, with no need to contact McNeel & Associates. You can move a license to a different computer. Single-Computer licensing will lock a license directly to a specific computer. When Rhino starts, enter the email associated with your Rhino account. Cloud Zoo Tasks Join A TeamĪccept the invitation sent to the email associated with your Rhino account.Ĭreate a Rhino account using an email address in the same domain as your domain-linked team. Learn how to link your Team to your Domain. This eliminates the need to manually invite people to the team.ĭomain linked teams support custom authentication providers like Google, Active Directory, Okta, One Login, and more. These users will also automatically have access to your licenses. When your team is linked to your domain, any user that logs in from that domain will automatically be added to your team. Invite members to your team using one of two methods:.Use your license on any computer where Rhino is installed. Let McNeel manage the license server infrastructure.The scope of work for Rhino for Mac is currently being investigated. Developers will have to make changes to their code to support these new Macs. The next version of macOS - Big Sur - will support these new processors. OpenGL 4.1 capable video card is recommended. 64-bit Intel or AMD processor (Not ARM) 8 GB memory (RAM) or more is recommended. For those who have been closely following the development, there have been a number of late-stage BETA optimizations that we have been working on that did not make it into the initial release. TL DR: Apple Macs are transitioning away from Intel chips to their own Apple Silicon. Rhino runs on Windows and Mac desktop and laptop computers with: Rhino 7 for Windows Hardware.
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