https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89780
--- Comment #14 from Andy <[email protected]> --- Yes, that is another clever trick, which is practical when you are sure to start always from the first slide, and thus it is enough to add animation to text objects in it. If you have a 40 slides presentation ad you need to be able to start anywhere, however, adding animation to ALL text objects is really too much time. Regarding the other workaround, i.e. disabling hardware acceleration (which is what I am doing at the moment, even if gradients are defective as I wrote), I discovered another problem. You could think that with nowadays, ultra-powerful PCs, animations in a slide presentation would not really need hardware acceleration.... or so at least thought I. Alas today I realized that the "fade in" animation type that I often use, and works flawlessly WITH hardware accel, looks jerky and awful without HW acceleration. I had to frantically change all animations of this type in a presentation because they would have looked totally awkward. I had no time to check a large number of animation types, though. Maybe the fade in/out are the worst cases. And this is on an Intel Core i7 machine with 10 GB ram, quite a mean machine as far as I know. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.
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