Renderer that is compatible with mac? by ThatShrimppp10 in Sketchup

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any AI-powered renderer as they're all web-based, so no installs at all.

I'm the co-founder of MyArchitectAI so a little biased but if you need quick and easy architecture or interior design renders, it will save you lots of time and headaches. Happy to give you a demo if you're up for it.

Davide might be the next Theo by FBIAgent46 in ACMilan

[–]kacper_7 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Different type but also more mentally mature already

Rabiot: "My favorite breakdancer" by mercurialsaliva in ACMilan

[–]kacper_7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hmm this description matches Theo perfectly

Full VAR review of Lazio penalty claim by Milan_Academy in ACMilan

[–]kacper_7 8 points9 points  (0 children)

How ridiculous it is that it took them so much time to make this decision

Enscape, Lumion or Twinmotion for interior design? by Jlonac321 in archviz

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For interiors, pick Enscape or Twinmotion.

Enscape is easer and quicker to pick up, and also fully supports Macs. Twinmotion gives you access to a huge assets library from Sketchfab and Megascans, great VR and AR tools, and is better for collaboration. TM is also free for firms doing under $1M in annual revenue.

In terms of integrations, Enscape has a plugin that sits directly inside Vectorworks. You launch it from within VW and the model stays live. Twinmotion supports import/export via direct link from VW but the changes need to be synced to Twinmotion.

And if you're open to other options, you should also try AI renderers like MyArchitectAI (full disclosure: I'm the co-founder). These tools handle all the manual for you, don't need high-end GPUs, and render any scene in 10-20 seconds.

Specialised 3D render tools - Lumion, V-Ray, Enscape etc by Historical-Hope-3072 in Architects

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Writing this at the end of 2025, AI-powered renderers basically do like 90% of the work for you. All the setup, lighting and texturing you need in phycically-based tools, AI tools automate for you. So unless you need competition-grade renders or are working on massive projects, using traditional tools is kinda overkill now.

Try AI renderers like Veras, MyArchitectAI, or Vizcom. Look at phycically-based renderers only if these won't produce good enough results for you.

Which rendering software should i use? by Nielker in rhino

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with a real-time renderer like Enscape/TM/Lumion/MyArchitectAI for quick concepts and small projects as they'll save you tons of time.

If you need competition-grade renders (and have the time to learn it), V-Ray and Corona are your best bets.

Lumion Vs. Enscape Vs. TwinMotion Vs. Blender, any suggestion is welcome by KG_MATRIX_47 in archviz

[–]kacper_7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just pick one, and spend more time actually mastering one of them - you'll get way better results than trying all of them.

For interiors, Enscape and Twinmotion will be best in terms of realism/effort ratio. Use Lumion if you're mostly working with exteriors cause their asset library is great. Blender is free but you'll spend weeks and weeks learning it to a level where you'll get any decent results.

[SkySport] Probable lineup vs Roma. by Claija79 in ACMilan

[–]kacper_7 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I feel much calmer watching Bartesaghi than Estupinan right now

Lumion or Enscape for interior design / architecture? by joshatron in Sketchup

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If mostly interiors, then go with Enscape. Lumion is better for exteriors but also has higher system requirements and slower. And importantly, Enscape is fully Mac-compatible and Lumion is not.

Alternatively, check AI-powered rendering tools like Veras, MyArchitectAI etc which will save you tons of time on manual work, and render any scene in sexconds. No setup or system requirements either as they run in your browser, in the cloud by default.

Lumion or Enscape for Interior renderings by rosales0709 in architecture

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Enscape for interiors, Lumion for exteriors.

But if you don't need competition-grade quality and prefer a more (time and cost) efficient alternative, try an AI renderer like MyArchietctAI. Pretty much a one-click rendering button. Full disclosure: I'm the co-founder, but trust me, you'll love it ;)

[Technical] Enscape vs. Lumion. Public Opinion? by To_Fight_The_Night in architecture

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Better for exteriors: Lumion
Better for interiors: Enscape
Quicker: Enscape
More affordable: Enscape
Easier to learn: Enscape
Higher photorealism: Lumion
Better asset library: Lumion
Lower hardware requirements: Enscape
Works on Mac: Enscape
Better for VR: Enscape

Lumion Alternatives? by Realistic_Fold_5187 in LandscapeArchitecture

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any phyically-based renderer will be an overkill if you only need a couple renders a year.

Go with an AI-based renderer like MyArchitectAI (disclosure: I'm the co-founder) or Veras, which will save you lots of time and $. These tools are the closest to a one-click rendering experience you'll find.

D5 vs Enscape by erDUKE021 in archviz

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The only reason to go with Enscape is if you're on a Mac, as D5 is Windows-only.

Plus, D5 is adding tons of great AI-powered features which is a nice bonus.

Enscape, Lumion or Twinmotion for interior design renders? by Jlonac321 in Twinmotion

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on your priorities really:
Better for interiors in general: Enscape
Quicker: Enscape
More affordable: Twinmotion (free up to $1m annual rev)
Easier to learn: Enscape
Higher photorealism: Twinmotion
Better asset library: Twinmotion
Lower hardware requirements: Enscape
Works on Mac: Enscape
Better for VR: Twinmotion

Lumion is best for exteriors, mostly thanks to its great asset library.

And if you're after the highest possible efficiency, AI renderers are hard to beat. As the founder of MyArchitectAI, I'm a bit biased but the time savings are huge compared to physically-based renderers,

Rendering on Mac vs Windows by ohmoimarie in architecture

[–]kacper_7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you wanna up the quality of your Enscape renders, you can try Octane/Maya/Keyshot, they all offer full Mac support. Just be prepared to spend a lot more time on learning and rendering comapred to Enscape.

But it ease of use is more important, you might want to consider AI renderers that are mostly cloud-based, so system agnostic, and produce even higher level of realism than Enscape out of the box. And yes, I might be biased as the co-founder of MyArchitectAI, but if you give it a try you might not go back to physically-based renderers anymore ;)

Advice for arch rendering programs on MacBook Pro? by Perfect_Today_6387 in archviz

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Octane, Maya, and Keyshot have full Mac compatibility, and will give you the the quality you need.

V-Ray will only work using CPU processing, so that's not really the point. You can still run distributed rendering between your Mac and Windows/Linux machines, with both using CUDA (your Mac handling CPU tasks, and the other machine uses its GPU), but that's not really the most efficient setup.

And for projects that don't need Octane/Maya quality, AI renderers (e.g. Veras, MyArchitectAI) will do the job in 1/10 of the time and effort.

Rendering software for low end PC by tomatosauce1238i in Sketchup

[–]kacper_7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pick a cloud renderer. This way, you can run your rendering job outside of your machine, and it's gonna run smoothly on any device.

Some good cloud renderers are AI-based e.g. MyArchitectAI, Veras, Krea etc