John Philip
Just Member
This is an old issue.
Have seen the problem as far back as on the 400MHz G4's multiproc. machines.
But it still prevails.
Description: When saving Photoshop documents to a network drive, the saved file randomly gets a one-two-three pixel horizontal line.
There's no error message, so the doc saves normally - but - when one opens the doc again, theline is there - solidly embedded...
Adobe has two solutions mentioned in Adobe support dokument 323489.
One to disable the Async i/o extension the other to copy the file/-s to a local drive.
Of course solution two is not very useful as it is normally Graphic facility houses having the problem - and copying 1-2-3 GB + files back and forth is not really good for productivity.
Solution 1 does not seem to work in this case.
The site having the problem uses Nortel high-end switches and giga-networking - everything has recently been testet and measured through.
Now, would there be any point in setting the network card for half- duplex or is there anybody else out there having any good ideas ??
Kind regards
John Philip
Have seen the problem as far back as on the 400MHz G4's multiproc. machines.
But it still prevails.
Description: When saving Photoshop documents to a network drive, the saved file randomly gets a one-two-three pixel horizontal line.
There's no error message, so the doc saves normally - but - when one opens the doc again, theline is there - solidly embedded...
Adobe has two solutions mentioned in Adobe support dokument 323489.
One to disable the Async i/o extension the other to copy the file/-s to a local drive.
Of course solution two is not very useful as it is normally Graphic facility houses having the problem - and copying 1-2-3 GB + files back and forth is not really good for productivity.
Solution 1 does not seem to work in this case.
The site having the problem uses Nortel high-end switches and giga-networking - everything has recently been testet and measured through.
Now, would there be any point in setting the network card for half- duplex or is there anybody else out there having any good ideas ??
Kind regards
John Philip