Christian @ 2CT Media
Active Member
Inside the "work" folder inside onyx on the boot drive. No wonder it is so slow. And no way to change that?
If your work folder is on your boot drive you didn't set up onyx correctly after install.
Inside the "work" folder inside onyx on the boot drive. No wonder it is so slow. And no way to change that?
It always seems we get the same response from the Onyx fanboys but they rarely can answers any question
What annoys me and where the term fanboys comes in is when some one complains about or asked about Onyx the response usually seems to be that your offend instead of explaining in detail the settings or solutions.
I have regularly used probably a dozen RIPs over the years outputting to film, plates, proofs, digital press, wide format inkjets of all kinds and ran trials and beta tested at least a dozen more so I am somewhat familiar with most of them and real familiar with a few of them. Yes I tested Onyx more than once and in comparison to others I personally wouldn't want to use it.
As for Caldera for those wishing to avoid Windows OS which I can really understand it is a great alternative, but like every RIP that has ever existed you can find things you like and things you won't. Best to do is get trials and I think they all have them and see what suits you best. In the end if it outputs the way you want and has the features you need then that will probably be the best RIP for but without trying different RIPs you will never know.
It sounds like your tests were not good tests... did you set up onyx or have a experienced professional? if you did it did you read all the FAQs of proper setup and organization?
I can tell you we have used Onyx since 7 and after setting it up properly with a well built computer it makes a huge difference.
Sounds like you really haven't tried other RIPs.
Another thing when we tested Onyx Thrive and caused us to rejected it was it slowness. It seemed to always have to go back and re-read and re-rip the original file every time a change was made.
Opening large files on a network can be slow depending on your network hardware - do you have gigabit cards installed, are the cables high speed etc.
I will echo pauly's comments on Onyx ease of use.
Open the file in job editor if it needs scaling or cropping, then press print. Can't see how that is difficult.