Poser 9 Downloads

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Poser 9 Downloads Rating: 4,6/5 375votes

Free download poser 9 full version. Photo & Graphics tools downloads - Poser Pro by Smith Micro Software, Inc and many more programs are available for instant and free download.

After the regular run of Service Release patches for Poser 11, Smith Micro has just announced a free Poser 11.1 update. It’s due later in December. There are “many improvements” and even a few new features. For free, which is nice. The additional features announced, so far, are: * 3D Animation Path – “create and manipulate a 3D path on the project scene and have an object travel that path while animating it at the same time”.

* Animation Palette – “group keyframes by categories and/or themes and easily identify the existing keyframes within each group. Additionally, the Animation Palette now shows the number of keyframes that a group contains at any given frame, and also allows for management and assigning of categories to keyframes”. * Paul v2 and Pauline v2. These are the flagship male and female characters which ship for free with Poser. I’m not likely to use any of those, but it’s good to see that hard work is being done by the new team on progressing Poser. Welcome to my hands-on guide to wrangling your new 2017 Amazon Fire 10″ HD tablet, after you first unbox it. The guide is especially geared to creatives who want things like: the best sketchbook apps; comic-book readers; and the right DeviantArt app.

On unboxing your new Fire 10″ tablet, for your own security first stick a tiny blob of Blu-tack over each of the two camera holes. Then power up the tablet, set your wi-fi password, and sign-in to your Amazon account. The Blu-tack can come off the camera later, once you’ve settled down with a range of apps you trust. 2.Then you can hide all the pre-loaded Amazon apps you’ll never use. You do this by hold+dragging one of the Amazon app icons on top of another one. When this is done the two icons automatically form into a folder, into which you can then drag all the other icons for the Amazon apps you don’t intend to use.

Creating this single “Amazon” folder goes a long way to cleaning clutter off your tablet screen. Because you can’t delete any of the apps the tablet comes pre-loaded with. ( Tidier, but still not prettier. I’ve yet to find out if naff app icons can be switched out for nicer ones). Now dive into the tablet’s “Settings” menus for thirty minutes (there’s a lot to find, down there) and turn off a whole lot of things — such as tracking, recommendations and ad-like notifications. OK, now you have the basics sorted and the tablet is 90% tamed. If you purchased the most affordable 10″ HD version you still get ads on the tablet’s lock-screen, but you can set these to be ‘family friendly’ in “Settings”.

I found these lock-screen ads quite fun, being a random mix of best-selling kiddie games, interior design apps, and travel gadgets. None of which I’d ever buy, but I admire the slick artwork as I flick past it and into my Kindle ‘Home’ screen. Which, incidentally, still features the occasional Amazon ad in “New items”. If you really don’t like that happening then you can either find instructions online on how to remove them, or pay Amazon £10 to get them off. Note there’s no Google Play store on the Fire tablets, and Amazon’s Kindle app store can be a bit of a pig. The quality apps are in there, but often all-but-hidden under a mountain of rubbish.

Firstly, note that not all apps are equal in the store. Some apps will show up in search results even when using a partial name. For instance, “Sketchbook” will find Autodesk’s official ‘Sketchbook – free drawing app’. But typing “Tayushi” or “Comitton” will not find either ‘Tayushi Sketches +’ nor ‘ComittoNxN’.

Amazon obviously deems these to be ‘lesser’ apps, that can only be found by typing their exact store name. Secondly, note there’s no “Creativity tools” category in the Store. Nor can you bookmark a WishList, which seems odd since a WishList would surely help Amazon to boost sales. The apps: * Best art app: Autodesk Sketchbook is on the Kindle app store for free under the name ‘‘.

The free version works fine, but there’s also a one-time £2.49 upgrade purchase which gets you things like smudge blending, markers, etc. Sketchbook on the Kindle Fire 10″ is wonderful, and big loaded brushes are fast and smooth even with a large canvas size. Everything you expect is here.

All you lack is pressure-sensitivity. But even with fingers or a capacitive pen/brush it’s perfect for quick conceptual thumbnails, the best of which can be worked up later in a full pen-monitor (such as the Ugee or Cintiq) albeit as flat.PNG file. You get seven layers on a decent canvas size.

Hardware reviewers say the new Fire 10″ is nearly as fast as a 9″ iPad in bench-tests, and the way Sketchbook works seems to bear this out. * Alternative art apps: I spotted the following worthy alternatives to Sketchbook on the Kindle app store: ‘‘ and ‘‘. Tayasui is very elegant app at £2, and well worth having to complement Sketchbook, since it has several fantastic unique features. But it only has three layers on the Fire, and saves to a flattened.PNG file. The other drawback is there’s no Smudge/Blend tool (as it seems there is on the iPad), but you can export a good size.PNG to Sketchbook where you do have Smudge. * Comic book reader: I was delighted to (eventually) discover that is on the store, at £1.50. Ignore all the other comic book readers, ComittoNxN aka Comitton is what you want.

If you know how to ‘sideload’ apps then you can even officially get it for free (sort folders by date, show full filenames, then download v1.65 as a.zip). Personally I thought that giving £1.49 to the creator was a worthy act, so I paid for it and saved myself some sideload-ing hassle. Just ignore the app’s very naff icon and Japanese language screens (shown in preview on the App store) — this is a top-quality app in English, just ‘made in Japan’ by one guy — who lacks a massive English-language marketing operation.

The only slight drawback is that, while it will load PDF files, it doesn’t show text on layered PDFs. Just the artwork. That can actually be quite an interesting feature, though, allowing the pure artwork to shine (if you have the correct sort of PDF). Incidentally it also works as a fine PDF viewer for scanned PDFs, but it seems you can’t tell the Fire to “always open PDFs” with it. After the install of ComittoNxN you are first presented with a file navigator view of the full Fire system, which can be a bit daunting. On the Fire 10″ you then need to go to: /storage/emulated/0/. To get to your usual media content and download folders.

Or drill down to your SD card. After loading your first.CBR or.CBZ comic / graphic-novel you then go into ComittoNxN’s “Settings” and set ‘Image Viewer’ to ‘Fit Width’ / ‘AutoRotate’ / ‘Not to Sleep’. You can also set the app to ‘operate by noise’. Then you’re pretty much good to go. * Media player: ‘‘, the free ad-free Kindle Fire version of the well-known and trusted media player. This loaded and played a 2.4Gb.MKV test movie with no problems at all, not even the slightest stutter or hesitation. Though it appears the Kindle can be persnickety about.MP3 types, whatever player you choose to use, for instance refusing 320Kbs.MP3s — and that seems a pity for such a media-centric tablet.

* DeviantArt: Yes, DeviantArt has its own free app, and as you’d expect it’s a beauty. This is what the luscious 1920px Kindle Fire 10″ screen was made for. Be aware that there are a lot of con-apps pretending to be DeviantArt, and it’s rated “Adult” so you won’t even see it in the Store if your Kindle’s Child-Friendly Settings are turned on. The official app you want is. You don’t need to log in, to browse DeviantArt’s pictures. Regrettably, there’s no “block all ponies” filter.

* Games: be warned that the Kindle store has a lot of drek and shady look-alikes. I wanted just one game on the tablet, and so I plumped for the acclaimed gamebook ‘‘ by Inkle, in its robust/expanded v1.3 version. Its vector graphics adapt very crisply to the screen size, and everything worked very smoothly. A quality game more suited to young children would be the steampunk point-and-click Machinarium, available on the Kindle. Interactive graphic novels: There are just a couple of these in the app store, both quality. Servicemaxx Keygen Download Sony. The famous with music, voice-cast, and autoplay. Made with Poser, and this is a special Kindle Fire HD edition of the book.

A bargain at 59p (about $1), but it will eat 600Mb of your tablet’s space. Also, which was later made into a TV series by Amazon Studios. The first three chapters free, then currently £2.51 (about $5). Both of these are from 2013/14, and it’s sad to see that nothing followed them on the Kindle Appstore. I guess the ratio of time-spent vs. Profits was not enticing to other entrants. * PDF Viewer: Installing the free Dropbox app will also give you a good trusted free PDF reader.

It’s a very basic and infinite-scrolling (rather than per-paging) PDF reader, but is perfectly adequate for looking at occasional academic papers or think-tank reports from the comfort of a sofa. You don’t even need to sign-in to Dropbox, to use their free PDF viewer. I found that Amazon’s native Kindle app can also open PDFs, and in a more ebook-y manner, but the rendering wasn’t as good as Dropbox. I’m not sure I’d want to read a full ebook from either, and unless it had lots of pictures and graphs I would prefer my dedicated e-ink Kindle ereader for reading a book (re-flowing / larger / crisper text, and it’s not as heavy to hold). *.ePub reader: Obviously the Kindle reader won’t be opening your.ePub e-books, as ePub is “the competition’s format”.

The best.ePub reader I tried was MReader, perfectly good, free and ad-free. You may need to turn on its “Autorotate” option after install. *.mobi reader: Of course the native Amazon Kindle app will open your.mobi ebook files. There’s no third-party.mobi reader here, such as the excellent ALreader on Google Play. If you find that the Kindle reader refuses to load a.mobi for some reason, simply use desktop software such as the free Calibre to convert it to.ePub. * Email: ‘K-9 Email’. Yes, this trusty old community-built warhorse (or war-dog) email client is available on the Fire, free.

A good alternative to the email app that comes pre-installed. Fm 2009 9 3 Keygen Crack. * Web browsing: The Kindle’s own pre-installed Silk Browser seems perfectly adequate for light Web browsing.

If you plan to do heavy browsing, and need ad-blocking, then you probably want to ‘sideload’ the mobile version of the Opera browser. * Folder browsing: I installed the free ES File Explorer File Manager, but I’m not sure I’ll keep it. It’s overkill, but does the job until I can find a solid free + ad-free alternative. * Screenshot maker: You already have one built-in. Locate the Kindle’s Power button and Volume-Down button, then press down both buttons together for one second.

That takes a screenshot, and saves it as a.PNG to a Screenshots folder in ‘Pictures’. Other thoughts: The Fire 10″ tablet is a touch heavier than I though it would be, but I’ve very pleased to find it doesn’t even get warm (let alone hot). If you have hard floors that it might drop on, or plan to take it out-and-about, then a protective tablet case is going to be a must-have. Also useful for propping it up. Be careful if you turn on “One-click apps purchases” and also have the Alexa voice-control on. I found that Alexa was useless for me, as she would consistently mistake what I was saying, and without pre-warning would start doing something I never intended. The risk of accidental purchases seemed too great, so: “Alexa, off”.

If you already have a dedicated e-ink Kindle 3 ereader, and want to keep using that for your “Send to Kindle” delivery from your desktop PC, then you’ll need to delve into device settings at the Amazon website. Otherwise Amazon will initially assume that your desktop’s “Send to Kindle” items go to your new Fire and will then clear them from the queue.

Your ebook purchases, on the other hand, should be available from any tablet with Kindle installed. New ebook purchases and samples should show up on your Kindle Fire ‘Books’ screen. That’s it, I hope these observations were helpful for those getting a new tablet for Christmas. It’s likely that few people have any pennies left in their Paypal after Black Friday, but here’s my selection of the most interesting new Poser / DAZ content released in November 2017.

Science Fiction: by Stonemason, for DAZ Studio. From The AntFarm, for DAZ Studio. For DAZ Studio, a fine ‘alien shoreline or pool’ scene complete with believable plants.

Looks different enough from the Dune sandworm that you’d be able to use in commercial renders. By Coflek-gnorg, for Poser.

Steampunk: Now on Renderosity, London224’s for Vue. The Terminal might be run by, for Poser.

For DAZ Studio. Replace the heart with a nut, to make it fit with the Clockwork Squirrels. A steampunk textures makeover, for the recent. Texture makeover set for for G3M, of DAZ Studio.. It’s lovely to have this in 3D and in DAZ Studio, but the model fairly closely references the satire painting “Der tod eines Pioniers” by Waldemar Kazak, so presumably it shouldn’t be used for commercial renders in your graphic novel or the like. From 1971s for Poser, in a lovely Jasper Morello-ish style.

For Poser, also from 1971s. Storybook: The is now also on the Renderosity store. Requires the., for Poser. For G8F, Daz Studio.

A characterful middle-aged woman, with a somewhat eastern European face. Fantasy:, which would fit well with the new scene. A fabulous RPG game-style fantasy outfit,..

I’m fairly sure this used to be on RuntimeDNA, but it’s now on the DAZ Store, and is now for either DAZ Studio or Poser. By Dinoraul, for Poser. An unusual “fantasy dinosaur” from expert dino-crafter Dinoraul. Toon: The great Nursoda is back (hurrah!) with a new character. Is presented as a Russian taxi-driver kind-a-guy.

But he looks fairly adaptable. 82 poses and a basic clothing set.

For the original Star! Character for Poser. The boots and hat could be replaced, to get the basis of a new sci-fi outfit. And and, three new Star!-like characters for Genesis 8. By Lady Littlefox for DAZ Studio. Scenes:, by Stonemason for DAZ Studio.

Would probably be a useful extender/background terrain set for The Heart Of The East for Vue. A huge landscape with different ecosystems merging into one another.

For DAZ Studio. Similar to the Forbidden Pool in The Lord of the Rings. Would probably look better exported to Vue and there layered with an ecosystem of small ferns and mosses.

Might also be used as a tidal rock-pool on the beach, when seen from above. Is an unusual one.

A complete for DAZ Studio. For DAZ Studio. Add-ons and plugins: for DAZ Studio. Looks like it might be as vital an add-on as the is. This new add-on has: Look at That. Look at Each Other. Look into My Eyes..

Quickly load a standard IES light profile to your DAZ Studio light. And finally, learn how to create your own texture sets for DAZ Studio, with Esha’s. A huge 32-session structured workshop. More picks next month. Just announced, Amazon Sumerian.

It’s Amazon’s crassly-named new tool for building 3D in virtual and augmented reality. Judging by the cringe-inducing 2002-style picture it looks like they’re anticipating organizations will be using VR for the same-old “Death by Powerpoint” presentations, but done in a way where you can’t look away because you have huge goggles strapped to your head. Perhaps you’ll at least be able to close your eyes, and thus have a snooze without anyone in the room knowing, though I guess there will also be all sorts of prompts and audio pings that will try to prevent that. Why would anyone want to work for an organisation which inflicted such horrors on staff, at a time of near-full employment (at least here in the UK).

But one hopes that employer fears of lawyered-up claimants — claiming motion sickness / eye-strain / headset-allergies / ‘unfriendly to disabled people’ etc — will put the kibosh on this before it starts. And it that doesn’t do it nodes. Nodes with adjustable spaghetti wires. Well, that was good Black Friday – Cyber Monday for me. And the nice thing was that it was all paid for by a $240 payment from the iClone store, finally paying out on some paid content I was slowly selling there.

Their well-timed payment got me: a new Kindle Fire 10″ HD tablet; about 18 really nice Poser/DAZ models and shaders; some more Crossdresser licenses; 50% off 500px, a Flickr alternative, plus the Bulkr software for mass downloading from Flickr. (Before anyone starts thinking that the iClone store is ‘a sure thing’ for selling 3D content, I should say that my $240 had been building up very slowly over a number of years). Right then, let’s have a quick look at newly-spotted ‘Cyber Monday’ bargains: excellent PzDB Poser content database is down to $37. There’s also a Trial version at if you want to see how well it makes an index of your Poser runtime.

My review is. 75% off, excellent. This is Poser clothing conversion software. If you have a paid pack of licenses in your CrossDresser 3 clothing conversion software, an.

Most CrossDresser licenses are down to $2.75 each. The store is a bit confusing: you might find it useful to start with my which has Web links at the bottom which take you straight to the license pages for the core/leading Poser figures. Comic-book and webcomic artists may also be especially interested in licenses for and the Nursoda line of characters.

You can also just say “what the heck”, and get all the licenses in a big bundle for $25.00. I see that a couple of new items are at 60% off in my WishList at, this morning. You might want to check your WishList to see what’s updated. Content Paradise. No movement on my extensive WishList of older Poser content. I guess there’s no sale there this year. Judging by my Vue WishList, there’s still been no general sale at the Cornucopia store (for Vue content).

But there are the excellent personal sales there from two vendors, Geekatplay Studio and Tony Meszaros. No sign of any discounting on the Vue software itself, this year. Really weird behavior from Vue. Told that the license has “expired”, and Vue will revert to a PLE (Personal Leaning Edition). “Reactivate”, successfully log onto online account, send new key by email. Load the emailed key, but then get a ‘bad key’ message on loading the key. Exit the key loading process.

Then I consult “About Vue” for license info and it’s the same as it was before. Full license and there are no PLE watermarks on big renders. I guess their registration/license server is on the blink. I can still get into the Cornucopia store fine, see my wishlist etc, with the usual registration details.

To get past it, without explicitly clicking on the SWITCH TO PLE button (which then induces watermarks), is a sequence something like: Load empty scene. Reactivate Now. Activate with Account Information. Web browser opens to Ignore it and leave it open. In Vue, choose Activate Manually.

Load License file (I’m assuming you already downloaded this via email once already). Vue will auto-decide for you that “This is the PLE” (only it’s not really) click OK on that message.

Close Web browser window. Then it works fine. For instance, a 1800px render of the Steampunk Elevator in action, an item which was purchased yesterday and locked to my license. No watermarks, despite all the alarm It appears that if you actively tell it SWITCH TO PLE it can do so (temporarily, as you get another chance next time you load VUE), but if it auto-decides that “it’s now the PLE” then it can’t over-write the previous license settings.

More Black Friday/Cyber Monday, likely to be of interest to readers of this blog *, the easy-to-use comics layout and speech-balloons tool. Cheesy marketing at the website, but it’s perfectly adequate for making a comic page if you don’t have Photoshop or don’t want to wrestle with all the complexities of Manga Studio. * The Unity Asset Store has 50% off. It’s the store for assets for game makers, which may interest some who need low-poly models. * Xfrog 3D plants, 60% off. * Blender Marketplace is at 25% off.

* Quadspinner GeoGlyph 2, 40% off. Terrain and erosion synthesis engine for World Machine. * Reallusion store (iClone, CrazyTalk Animator), up to 50% on selected products. * KeyShot upgrades will be 20% off on Cyber Monday. Wowzer, I didn’t think the new Amazon Fire HD 10″ 1080p tablet + Alexa would get lower than the standard £150 UK retail, but it is! £109 and free delivery. It’s included in Black Friday on both Amazon UK and USA.

Amazon must have decided they want to take a big loss on the hardware, to get the eventual income from ongoing content sales. Things to bear in mind: * It’s not really going to be the sort of ‘digital painting tablet’ that a 10″ iPad + Apple Pen can be. But then it’s a fifth of the price. * Amazon has their own equivalent of Google Play. The Fire 10″ can’t access Google Play without some workarounds, and even when it can it runs an older streamlined version of Android and thus may not play nicely with some Google Play apps. * If you find you really don’t like Amazon’s mis-targetted ads and “your tasteless friends also brought” on the lock-screen, you can do a unofficial workaround to remove them. Or just pay Amazon £10 later on their website, to have them removed.

* It has a 16:10 screen, eminently suitable for movies and showing your widescreen artwork — because no “black bars” above and below such content. Also good for comics and graphic novels and magazines. Shows 104% of the sRGB range, and has good blacks. * Alexa hands-free voice assistant. Apparently it works well, and it always listening.

* Mediocre camera. * Apparently it’s going to be rubbish in sunlight, re: reflections etc. It’s an indoor tablet for lower lighting situations. * Reviews say it’s ugly.

But I checked out a model on display in my local Tesco store and it looks fine to me. It looks even better at £109. So what did Black Friday amount to, for me?

* I got a Flickr replacement in the form of 500px, at 50% off for the first year. Plus a most excellent Flickr bulk-browser and downloader, Bulkr Pro, at 60% off.

Savings = $50. * $35 spent at Renderosity got me $70 of really nice sci-fi and fantasy items, plus the Thumbnail Designer addon for Poser. Actually, it was a little less for me, as I had some store credit. Savings = $35. * $11 at Conucopia, for Tony Meszaros’s high quality Vue items, after he ‘jumped the gun’ with huge 70%-80% discounts a week early.

Savings: About $70. * Another $11 of Cornucopia items, after Geekatplay Studio also joined the discounting at 50%-off. Savings: $15. In terms of 3D, $57 got me a nice bundle of 15 of the highest-quality items. Plus another $67 to escape from Flickr before the idiots at Yahoo crash-and-burn it completely. Total savings: $170.

If there are eventually Cyber Monday deals on Monday, from Cornucopia and DAZ and Content Paradise, then they’ll likely be a little late. As my PayPal is now all-but flat.

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