![]() ![]() Going back to software that still has pretty coloured icons felt odd to us. Many competitors have long migrated to a monochrome style, to limit any distractions to the image you’re working on, and its own colour spectrum. One minor gripe is that the toolbar is too colourful. This is actually all very reminiscent of Adobe Photoshop, and if you’re comfortable with that behemoth, it won’t take you long to feel right at home with Affinity Photo.īut it’s not all perfect (which software is?). Other tools and information about your current image file are along the top, with a detailed inspector to the right, known as the Studio, leaving the bulk of the interface to your canvas. Just like many other applications of this type, mouse over one to reveal a tooltip giving its title, and any tool with a small triangle lower right of it indicates additional yet similar tools are but a click away. You’ll find it to the left as a series of small icons. Nice and clean, packed with features, but with some design annoyancesĪffinity Photo’s interface is designed to be quite minimalist, while still presenting you with all the features you would need at any time.Designer in the future on my current desktop.You’ll find toolbars on the top, left and right of the interface, leaving the rest of the screen real estate for your image (Image credit: Serif) The application is currently unusable for me sadly. Fingers crossed for me I will be able to use A. In the meanwhile I will wait and see if the next Nvidia driver update will fix this problem perhaps. Or if anybody has experienced this issue at all. I am very curious if the people from Affinity are perhaps able to reproduce this issue on similar hardware. Designer on ''Warp'', but this doesnt fix the issue for me. Designer code by default? I tested with Rendering settings in A. Perhaps this ''Hardware acceleration'' is built in the A. I do not know exactly what the ''Hardware acceleration'' option in Spotify does under the hood. No more stuttering and screen flickering. On all different Hz settings, with G-SYNC on and off. Then when I went into advanced settings, I disabled the option ''Hardware acceleration'' and poof, spotify worked like a charm again. After some testing with different Hz settings and G-SYNC on and off, the stuttering and screen flickering still happened in Spotify. Now here comes a fun fact for the developers who read this I had the exact same technical issue as described above, on the same new desktop with the Spotify Music application. I have the latest Nvidia drivers for my RTX2070 installed. Designer with the Nvidia drivers or the Nvidia G-sync tech. My gut gives me a feeling there is some sort of interferance from A. (While I am typing this it comes to my mind that I still need to try and reproduce the issue with lower Hz settings and with G-SYNC DISABLED). I have a Dell S2417DG gaming monitor, 2560x1440, running at 144Hz, with Nvidia G-SYNC ENABLED. Designer, the stuttering and flickering stops and other running applications are not affected by stuttering or flickering.Īfter tracking CPU and GPU temps/speeds/voltages whilst having this issue, I can safely say that all of those are stable, except for a small bump in load on the GPU, but of neglectable size I would think. The weird and interesting thing is that A. Designer application is only stuttering while I am ''in'' the application window with my cursor, and using the application. I have tested and replicated the issue with multiple applications opened and the stuttering & screen flickering only happens when I go into A. Then it starts stuttering and causing screen flickering on my monitor. Once the application is launched, I get about 3-5 seconds of normal control/use. Sadly after installation I instantly ran into a very weird technical issue which makes the software unusable for me personally. Yesterday I bought the latest version of A. ![]()
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