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>Q: Are there any special Firewall settings I need for PzDB?
New FAQs for PzDB1.1:
PzDB1:
Q: How is PzDB different from P3DO and Advanced Library?
A: PzDB is an
intelligent data-mining program that is able to "understand" the
relationships between Poser Library Items in a way that those other
programs never will. While AL does allow the user to manually tag
individual Items, both AL and P3DO are "folder-based" and make you
browse through your existing Library folders and subfolders in order
to find Items.
Q: Why does PzDB require Microsoft Access 2007, and do I have to buy it separately?
A: The Access
2007 is a remarkably powerful database engine and is the core
technology upon which PzDB is built. No, you do not have to purchase
it separately. PzDB comes with all the Access components you need
and the appropriate licenses. If you already own Microsoft
Office Access 2007 (and only version 2007) you do not
need to install the Access components. Q: But Microsoft Access is HUGE! Do I really need Access just to use PzDB? A: Microsoft Access is actually much smaller and requires much less computer resources than even the smallest installation of Poser. And if you’re a "power user" use Poser a lot, have a very large Library and as a result need PzDB, then you certainly have more than enough computer resources to run Poser and PzDB side by side.
Q: Does PzDB work with my earlier version of Access? A: Yes. PzDB works perfectly with all other versions of Microsoft Access. We have taken special steps to ensure that the Microsoft Access 2007 components we install do not cause conflicts with any existing Access version you might already have. You will not have the lengthy “Installing Microsoft Access…” routine that normally occurs when you switch between Access versions, nor will you see any unnecessary security warnings or have to setup any special permissions to get PzDB to work (Note: Vista users may have to set up permissions to get Poser to work, but not PzDB, see the next FAQ).
Q: Does PzDB work with Windows Vista? A: Yes. PzDB works perfectly under Vista, its Poser that has problems. If you are using Poser on a computer with Windows Vista, you have undoubtedly encountered User Access Control (UAC) issues. Smith-Micro recommends a number of workarounds for this including installing Poser to a folder other than the “Program Files” folder, (they even recommend installing it to the “My Documents” folder), or just disabling UAC altogether.
Q: Does PzDB work with Windows 7? A: Yes. PzDB works under Windows 7, again, there may be issues with security and UAC. You may need to install PzDB as an Administrator, you may need to run PzDB as an Administrator. (We are looking to these issues and may have a special Windows 7 update available soon.)
A: PzDB is able to Inventory any Poser Library from version 3 on, including PoserPro and Poser Debut. Using pRPC Remote Launch requires Poser 4 with ProPack or better, and using Automated Collections requires Poser version 7 or greater. Using Drag and Drop requires PoserPro, Poser 8 SR3 or greater, or Poser Debut.
Q. Does PzDB work with DAZ Studio? A. Yes. But PzDB only indexes Items located within the "Libraries" folders. All files with extensions of .DS .DSB and .DAZ are classified as "DAZ Scripts" regardless of the files actual contents, (i.e. a Character, a Pose, a Material, etc). DAZ Studio supports Drag and Drop.
Q: Does PzDB work with Poser Figure Artist? A: Yes, PzDB is able to inventory Poser Figure Artist Libraries too, However, Poser Figure Artist does not support pRPC Remote Launch, nor Poser 7 Automated Collections, so there currently is no way for PzDB to Launch content in Poser Figure Artist.
A: All of them. There is no limit in PzDB to the number of Items, the number of Groups, or, how many Items could be in how many Groups, or even how many Libraries you can index. Microsoft Access 2007 data files are limited only by the size of your hard drive.
Q: Why is this first Import is taking so long? A: When you Import a Library into PzDB, it has a lot of work to do. It (1) scans all the files in the Library, (2) fixes any missing icons it finds, (3) identifies Poser Items that aren't in the database, (4) finds new keywords, (5) Groups new Items, and finally (6) cross-references all the new Items.
The first time
it does this every Item is a new Item. This is the most work you
will ever ask PzDB to do at once. If you have a Library of 50,000 or
100,000 files (and you very well may), PzDB's first import may take
thirty minutes to an hour or more. Please be patient, the results
are worth it. Q: I just double-clicked on an icon and PzDB flashed a message about “launching” something but then nothing happed, why?
A: Any time you
double-click on any icon, PzDB will attempt to launch that Item via
Poser Remote Mode (pRPC). You must have BOTH Poser running and the
Poser Remote (pRPC) script loaded for that to work.
Q: Are there any special Firewall settings I need for PzDB?
A: Yes. PzDB
uses SND2SOCK.EXE to communicate with the Poser Remote (pRPC)
script, so it must be ALLOWED to serve locally (but it does not need
Internet access), and you should save that setting. During Product
Activation, the program MSACCESS.EXE needs to talk to our web
servers, to that must be ALLOWED. And each time you start PzDB
(after you Activate) it checks for updates, so REGISTRATION FILE
should be ALLOWED (and saved). A: Yes. The three standard wildcard characters work in our Search Engine. The Number Sign (#) can be used for any single digit. The Question Mark (?) represents any single character, (a letter, a digit, a space, or even punctuation. And the Asterisk (*) means any set of characters of any length.
For instance: V?3 would find: V-3, VA3, v 3, and V33, but not “V3.” V#Clothes would find: V2Clothes, V3Clothes, V4Clothes but not “VaClothes,”or “VicClothes.” V*3 would Find Victoria3, Viki3 and V3, but also find “Vic2 Skirt3a,” even “Valley Forge PA 14523”
Q: How do I use a Boolean “AND” in the Search Engine? A: In our Search Engine the wildcard character Asterisk (*) performs the same function as the operative “And.” So instead of searching for “red and shirt” you could just enter “red*shirt.” However, please note that the Asterisk wildcard is directional. So you might want to enter: “red*shirt, shirt*red” to find all the Items with both “red” and “shirt” in their name. On the other hand, we really don’t recommend that either; see the next FAQ:
A note about using Boolean AND in the Search Engine (i.e. the asterisk character “*”):
In our tests we
have found that almost all Searches using a wildcard asterisk, end
up being either too vague or too specific. In the above two
examples, the Search for “V*3” would find everything including
“Valley Forge PA 14513,” and while a Search for “red*shirt,
shirt*red” would find you all the Items with “red” and “shirt” in
their name, it certainly would
not find all of the shirts you have that are (or might become)
red.
Q. Can I add a Keyword to an Item? A. Yes. In PzDB1.1 you can add any Keyword to any Item of set of Items you wish.
A: Because those
are not the same things, even though some people use those words
interchangeably. The Library Folder is, in fact, a
subset of the greater Poser Runtime Folder which also
contains the Geometries Folder (that holds all the 3d models of
people and props and things) the Textures Folder and lots of other
folders. It is the Library Items that bring all that content into
Poser. When a vendor distributes content, they have to
distribute an entire Runtime Folder. A. No, those are very different things. Poser users and Microsoft programmers use the word “Runtime” in entirely different ways.
The actual meaning of “runtime” is: “What the computer needs at the time a given program is running.” So in Poser we have a folder called “Runtime” that contains all the 3d models and textures and things Poser needs when Poser runs. Poser users have come to call all that Content itself their “Runtime.”
The Microsoft Access 2007 components we install with PzDB are a set of files that Access needs when it runs. Microsoft officially calls it “The Microsoft Access Runtime Edition.” It has nothing to do with the Poser Runtime Folder. If the PzDB installer notices that you do not already have Microsoft Access 2007 installed on your computer, you will be prompted to install the Microsoft Access Runtime Edition.
Q: I have the Free Trial Version of PzDB, where do I get the Full Version? A: There really is no “Free Trial Version” of PzDB. Its the same as the “Full Version,” it installs itself in Free Trial Mode (and under a Free Trial License) for up to sixty (60) days, after which Registration and Activation are required.
Q: What is
Registration and Activation? NEW FAQs for PzDB 1.1: Q: Is there a difference between adding a Item to a Group, and adding a Keyword to an Item that makes it belong to a Group? (i.e. adding an Item to the Victoria 3 Group vs. adding the Keyword “V3” to the same Item)
A: Not really. The only difference would be that when you add a
Keyword to an Item you can Search for that Keyword. This means you
can add Keywords like “Hair” that don’t belong to Groups but are
very useful in Searches. Then again, you can also have Groups that
don’t have any Keywords at all, so you can only add Items directly
to those Groups. But as far as Keywords that already in a
Group (like V3) there really is no difference. A: Yes. Uncheck more Keywords in the Current Item view. Remember that Keywords that are unchecked (or “disabled”) stay that way (until you change them back). So as you use PzDB over time and continue to disable irrelevant Keywords, the accuracy of your Related Folders list will continually improve.
Let’s say you’ve clicked on a material pose for Kozoburo’s “Kozlong” hairstyle. It might have Keywords like “Kozoburo” “Kozlong” “Brunette” and “Hairstyle.” Clearly, “Brunette” and “Hairstyle” are not relevant and would link to bunch of Items you don’t want right now. So they should be unchecked. “Kozoburo” doesn’t help that much either so turn it off too. Now you’re left with “Kozlong” and the only Folders left in the Related Folders list have Items with the Keyword “Kozlong” and they will be the ones you’re looking for. Later, when you click on other “Brunette” or “Hairstyle” or “Kozoburo” Items, those Keywords will already be disabled. And your Related Folders list will automatically be that much more accurate.
More questions? Try the |
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