

If you’re like most companies you want to maximize performance, maximize uptime, improve efficiencies, and minimize cost of ownership. Industry sources indicate the big reason companies replace their visual display system is because they begin to decay in performance - projection systems produce uneven lighting, poor resolution, low light output, unacceptable contrast, alignment problems, flickering, thermal drift, obsolete components, etc. A portion of this installation base is comprised of system upgrades.
#Input lag on quotkeyboard upgrade#
Centralized control systems can also ease operating use.The upgrade problemEach year a significant number of visual display systems are sold to the simulation market. Maintenance of CRT projection systems can be reduced and operational use improved through the use of an auto alignment system. Some systems offer color matching and uniformity, digital soft-edge matching, and unbeatable video and data image quality. CRT projection systems offer a long service life, both in picture tube life and the overall projection system. CRT technology provides high resolution with high contrast, allowing truly black nights and objects visible at a distance without the pixelized screen door effect found in DLP™ and LCD projection systems. The proven visual fidelity of CRT projection systems is equaled by few display technologies.
#Input lag on quotkeyboard mac#
Is there any hidden info or mode that gets stored in a photoshop file created in a Mac that cannot be read or accessed by a PC, that could be causing the lag in after effects? Another strange note, when I deleted all the layers from their multi-layered 80mb PSD file and just added one flattened text layer, the size did not get reduced when I saved it. I already tried shuffling between the 2 files and looking for differences in the info window in photoshop but there really is nothing. And why is their file 80mb but mine is just 5mb when there is no difference in their specifications. So I don't know why their file (which was created on a Mac, but "Saved As" again anyway on my PC) exhibits input lag in after effects, but my file doesn't encounter any lag. Their file was 80mb while mine was just 5mb with identical layers. And they're both at RGB color at 8 bits/channel.

I could not for the life of me find any difference at all between the original PSD file from the Creatives dep't and the new file I created with the layers copied from their file. I have a question for the community though. Now on to the breakthrough, I discovered that if I take the PSD file from the Creatives department, copy all it's layers, and paste them into a new document with identical dimensions, and then save that out, I can import it into after effects and animate it all I want with absolutely NO LAG!!!


It's only when I try the keyboard commands that the lag happens. A funny thing i discovered is that if I drag the layer with the mouse the first time, no lag happens. After which i can do anything with the layer with no lag. Even if I delete all layers in Photoshop and just leave one simple flattened text layer, as soon a I import it into After Effects and try to nudge the layer using Shift + arrow keys, or try to to change the color of the layer, or really do anything with it, has to go through 6 seconds of lag before executing. This happens with all their files: any layer that hasn't been touched yet has to go through 6 seconds of lag on the first interaction with. If I import them into After Effects and try to interact with any layer, it has to go through 6 seconds of lag before anything happens. I found out that the culprit that causes the input lag in my After Effects is actually the PSD files that we receive from our Creative department for us to animate. I may have some sort of a breakthrough, for me at least.
