Thanks for the answers.
1. Native exposure uses the exposure settings set in your Fusion file and Advanced is suppossed to use auto-exposure settings. But we always use Native settings from the file. Thanks for brining this up. We will remove this option from Render settings.
Aah, so that's what Advanced Exposure does, though I feel just a re-name of it would do fine instead of removing it as from my native render, I noticed that some region is over exposed, so auto-exposure in some situation would do fine (quick render). So instead of having it write, exposure : advanced, perhaps, exposure : auto is better?
So for cloud render, the ray-tracing is the same as native: advanced ray tracing?
2. Re-render is meant to be used if you want to re-render the same image in a bigger size. It should not change the exposure of your image. We are curious to know how your image changed. Can you tell us if you re-rendered from Fusion or from My Renderings?
It's re-rendered from Fusion, I didn't change anything, just clicked re-render, ensure the render settings is the same as previous and render it.
3. If you render in "final" quality, the noise will go away.
That doesn't seem to be the case though, in particular with the dark regions of the photo (I wonder if Auto Exposure has something to do with it), I'll post a more detailed comparison between native and cloud render quality tomorrow as I'll be away for the rest of the day later.
4. Pending to render usually happens when the file is being translated (to a format that can be rendered) or when the job is in queue. This does not usually take a long time but it depends on various factors such Subscription type (Student or paid). I will look into the renderings that you submitted to see if they have taken an usually long time to render.
The render is done via a different paid colleague account so don't think you'll be able to find records of it via my account, would naming the rendered file name (the one given when I chose to download it from Fusion360) suffice?
Omar Tan
Malaysia
Mac Pro (Late 2013) | 3.7 GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon E5 | 12GB 1.8 GHz DDR3 ECC | Dual 2GB AMD FirePro D300
MacBook Pro 15" (Late 2016) | 2.6 GHz Quad-Core Intel Core i7 | 16GB 2.1 GHz LPDDR3 | 4GB AMD RadeonPro 460
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