> ...  for me RS is vital and alive. A massive attraction for me is that I do
> have to work to bring myself up to speed with apsects of RS that I want to
> add to my skills and the fun and value is the greater because of that. Nor
> do I think much would be saved if I had someone showing me how to do every
> little thing, I think I'd go back to engraving .

Uhhmmm ... what ?

> I can not emphasize enough this point ... it is best summed up by someone's
> byline on a forum ... No need to re-invent the wheel, but he that does knows
> more about wheels. And it's the peripheral understanding and chance
> happenings that can be so useful even if half of them turn into dead ends
> ... and every now and then a better wheel gets made too .

True . However , sometimes , "time is of the essence" .

> I've had RS for a couple of years and yet just the other day I realised I
> was continually bugged by the inability to deselect one item of a selection
> without having to deselect them all and start all over ... and finally it
> dawned on me that RS couldnt be that silly, so I tried the Alt button ...
> what a sense of achievement ... and absolute proof of something I try not to
> confront .. that I'm thick as a brick.
> Neil Cooke.

  Yes , absolutely no doubt that many RS3D users seem to indeed , revel ,
in the "Chinese Puzzle" aspect of RS3D .

studio
www.niagara.com/~studio
www.studiodynamics.net



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