What does this mean????

Daz is using this description "2 Anatomical Elements Material Preset"   What are they talking about?

Comments

  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604

    It means that the product has material presets for the anatomical elements which come with the relevant pro Packages..

  • fred9803fred9803 Posts: 1,564

    "Anatomical elements" is Daz-speak for genitals LOL..... oops I said a naughty word. What you refer to are shaders/textures for the ..um ..euphemism.

  • "Anatomical elements" is Daz-speak for genitals LOL..... oops I said a naughty word. What you refer to are shaders/textures for the ..um ..euphemism.

    Dear God, is daz run by two year olds???  I find it sad that a professional company can't say "genitals".......

  • And God turned around and cried bitterly. crying

    IMHO this is more than pitiful. But who knows, maybe the DAZ responsibles are not self "equipped" with such "accessories"? cheeky

  • IceDragonArtIceDragonArt Posts: 12,548

    I have to admit that the first time this was brought I was laughing so hard I almost cried.  One would think that one would want to be clear so that if there were any underage children using this stuff their parents wouldn't accidentlally give them access to *anatomical elements* without knowing what that actually was. 

  • ByrdieByrdie Posts: 1,783

    Next big seller coming to Daz: fancy lace cloths to conceal the fact that your furniture has "limbs". Oh, those naughty chairs and tables! devil

  • Ken OBanionKen OBanion Posts: 1,447

    Way back when, in the early days of the 'online experience' (even before the Internet), there was a company called American PeopleLink, or APL, as we fondly knew it.  (Yeah, I'm dating myself; what's your point?)

    At one time, APL decided to go 'all-in' on the whole 'family friendly' craze, and set up filters which effectively banned certain words from appearing in members' posts; in some cases, entire posts were rejected outright, for containing potentially offensive content.  One upshot of that policy change was that an online support group for breast cancer survivors had to resort to calling their disease 'hooter cancer', to get their posts past the filters!

    The backlash was horrendous, and the shockwaves from it sent users scurrying, most of them straight into the arms of outfits like AOL.

    APL no longer exists.  AOL barely does.

  • SimonJMSimonJM Posts: 5,999

    Way back when, in the early days of the 'online experience' (even before the Internet), there was a company called American PeopleLink, or APL, as we fondly knew it.  (Yeah, I'm dating myself; what's your point?)

    At one time, APL decided to go 'all-in' on the whole 'family friendly' craze, and set up filters which effectively banned certain words from appearing in members' posts; in some cases, entire posts were rejected outright, for containing potentially offensive content.  One upshot of that policy change was that an online support group for breast cancer survivors had to resort to calling their disease 'hooter cancer', to get their posts past the filters!

    The backlash was horrendous, and the shockwaves from it sent users scurrying, most of them straight into the arms of outfits like AOL.

    APL no longer exists.  AOL barely does.

    And in the UK, AOL for a while, banned people from joining if they lived in Scunthorpe ;)

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