Different kinds of content go in different places. Some, like scenes, you would just put anywhere and browse to the files to open them, they don't "belong" anywhere. Others however you want to place in specific subfolders of the folder Bryce is installed in so they are seen within Bryce's interface. For example on my Windows XP system (these paths may differ on your system), I would put objects within subfolders in "C:\Program Files\DAZ 3D\Bryce7\Presets\Objects", materials within subfolders in "C:\Program Files\DAZ 3D\Bryce7\Presets\Materials", etc. Hopefully you can find answers to your specific installation question in the document linked above, otherwise let us know.
Different kinds of content go in different places. Some, like scenes, you would just put anywhere and browse to the files to open them, they don't "belong" anywhere. Others however you want to place in specific subfolders of the folder Bryce is installed in so they are seen within Bryce's interface. For example on my Windows XP system (these paths may differ on your system), I would put objects within subfolders in "C:\Program Files\DAZ 3D\Bryce7\Presets\Objects", materials within subfolders in "C:\Program Files\DAZ 3D\Bryce7\Presets\Materials", etc. Hopefully you can find answers to your specific installation question in the document linked above, otherwise let us know.
And for those on W7+, might want to install the entire Bryce outside of the Program Folders all together:
i.e. C:\MyBryce/etc
Because W7 "protects" the 2 official Program folders and will not let the programs change/save to them.
I actually have all my Bryce versions installed on D and not C at all, but that is how I run my PC. All that is on the C drive is the OS, AV and browsers,
Provided that you have installed them into the correct places, as shown by Sean, or in Horo's PDF, then you should find them in your presets libraries.
Scenes don't need to be installed, just store them somewhere and open them once you have Bryce open.
I actually have all my Bryce versions installed on D and not C at all, but that is how I run my PC. All that is on the C drive is the OS, AV and browsers,
Yes that's good too. D or F or G or ? ... as long as it's not C:/Program Files or C:/Program Files (x86) ;-)
Comments
What content did you download, and where did you install it to, and how?
Did you do it manually or did you use the DIM
This si a link to a PDF which expalins where all the different Bryce content formats should be installed. Done by Horo, one of our Bryce Gurus
http://www.horo.ch/docs/mine/pdf/BryceContent_v4.pdf
Different kinds of content go in different places. Some, like scenes, you would just put anywhere and browse to the files to open them, they don't "belong" anywhere. Others however you want to place in specific subfolders of the folder Bryce is installed in so they are seen within Bryce's interface. For example on my Windows XP system (these paths may differ on your system), I would put objects within subfolders in "C:\Program Files\DAZ 3D\Bryce7\Presets\Objects", materials within subfolders in "C:\Program Files\DAZ 3D\Bryce7\Presets\Materials", etc. Hopefully you can find answers to your specific installation question in the document linked above, otherwise let us know.
And for those on W7+, might want to install the entire Bryce outside of the Program Folders all together:
i.e. C:\MyBryce/etc
Because W7 "protects" the 2 official Program folders and will not let the programs change/save to them.
I actually have all my Bryce versions installed on D and not C at all, but that is how I run my PC. All that is on the C drive is the OS, AV and browsers,
How do I find products purchased and downloaded into bryce? In DAZ Studio it is in Smart contents or content library.
Provided that you have installed them into the correct places, as shown by Sean, or in Horo's PDF, then you should find them in your presets libraries.
Scenes don't need to be installed, just store them somewhere and open them once you have Bryce open.
Yes that's good too. D or F or G or ? ... as long as it's not C:/Program Files or C:/Program Files (x86) ;-)