File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
Guy who likes running alot of stuff together requests /hr/ help. Im mostly using ACDSee 5 for image viewing but when it comes to images 10000Xsomething in size it becomes extremly slow and sometimes crashes. So, is it ACDSee sucking or any program would have similar problems cause I run alot of stuff simultaniusly?

Oh, and any good alternatives to ACDSee?
Offering some of the problem-causing images as a reward.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
>>96914
Might be just you, or not enough horsepowers on your computer. For me>>96916gives no trouble on ACDSee Pro (8.0) - I should know as I am the one who traced it.
>> Anonymous
>>96919
horsepower...

that's primarily ram, right?
>> Anonymous
I stopped updating my ACDSee when I tried ACDSee 6.0 and found it too "heavy" compered to 5.0... Was that fixed in later versions? Mb its time to upgrade >.>
>> Anonymous
My RAM usage is at 75% most of the time... out of 2GB. Is that the issue?
>> Anonymous
I believe ACDSee 8 is just as bloated as 6, if not even more so. It has ton of features I've never even glanced at, as I primarily use it as my picture viewer / manga reader program. I know there are lighter tools for that, but none I've tested work like I'd like them to. Which is why I've stuck to ACDSee ever since discovering it.

For the record, my system is AMD3500+ with 1 Gig of memory and midrange, one generation old ATI card. No problems viewing 10K x 10K on ACDSee.
>> Anonymous
im still using Acdsee classic ( 2.53?) on a AthlonXP 3200+ w/ 2gb ram and it opens these 10k images no problem
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>96929
Thnx for the info, compering our systems I see the problem gotta be me stuffing the RAM with a billion other things.
Here's a last pic to end this thread. Feel free to flood with more 10kX10k images ;p
>> Anonymous
Acdsee is crap incarnate ever since they started adding stuff way back in version 4.

Use Faststone Image viewer. It's free and doesn't have a huge amount of shitty stuff that might interest a mac user who likes slideshows.
>> Anonymous
I use CDispaly for reading manga, its the most natural reader i've ever found. I used to use ACDSee before that For image browing, i use Fast stone.
>> Anonymous
I use irfanview, which is pretty lean and mean.
The only drawback is the lack of Unicode support, but considering the price (free) I hardly have cause for complaint...
>> Anonymous
>>96974
Irfanview for me, too. Animated gifs seem to use more CPU and run choppier than in the browser, though.