How do I change this to access a different houdini.env file? I have Houdini installed on both my Windows desktop and my Windows laptop, and both write to the same houdini.env file because they're both default installs, and OneDrive syncs any changes. The desktop has a Geforce RTX 3060 Ti card installed, while the laptop has an RTX 2060. After I work in one of them, booting up the other gives me an error that it can't find the Geforce card corresponding to its setup and both default to the Intel integrated graphics. Also, the scaling values of 1.75 that I have to use to be able to read things on the desktop makes things too big on the laptop.
What I want to do is to have each install read its own houdini.env file so that will each boot up properly configured for their environments. I emailed Side FX about the problem, but their response seemed overly complex, and I was wondering if there's a simpler way to achieve this...
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Technical Discussion » Where is the houdini.env??
- cubdukat
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Houdini Indie and Apprentice » Problems Licensing Houdini Apprentice in Fedora 11
- cubdukat
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edward
Have you tried running the network configuration tool from the menu? I'm not familiar with fedora but that's what it sounds like you should be doing from some simple googling. Something called “system-config-network”
From what I understand, Fedora is a lot like RHEL, except Red Hat doesn't officially offer support for it or make you pay for it. Supposedly all the features that eventually end up in RHEL get tested out in Fedora first.
Houdini Indie and Apprentice » Problems Licensing Houdini Apprentice in Fedora 11
- cubdukat
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Houdini Indie and Apprentice » Problems Licensing Houdini Apprentice in Fedora 11
- cubdukat
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I recently downloaded the 64-bit version of Houdini Apprentice Edition to use on my Linux box. I'm currently running Fedora 11 64-bit, and it seems to have installed all right, but when I go to register the license, it won't accept my server.
I understand that Fedora sets the hostname to localhost.localdoman when it installs, and that's what the license server doesn't like, but what should it be? The system isn't part of any big network; it's just a home system that gets onto the Internet occasionally just like a Windows box.
Right now I'm holding off on getting the HD version until I can get the free one working. I know there's a simple fix for this, and perhaps someone could help me find it.
I understand that Fedora sets the hostname to localhost.localdoman when it installs, and that's what the license server doesn't like, but what should it be? The system isn't part of any big network; it's just a home system that gets onto the Internet occasionally just like a Windows box.
Right now I'm holding off on getting the HD version until I can get the free one working. I know there's a simple fix for this, and perhaps someone could help me find it.
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