Hi Zakhar
I wonder if there might also be an issue with connecting to the project when switching between wireless and the wired ethernet when these mean there is a switch of IP address?
If I: start a process using the ethernet, then disconnect and close Metashape and then, at a later point in time, try to connect over the wireless network, I find that the connection times out. The project then reverts to whatever is stored locally. One is then unable to connect to the cloud process and sync to the file located there once it has finished. The only option left is then to delete the project and start again, and then check back online on my account page to see if the process has completed. When it is completed, one can connect the ethernet and everything syncs as it should.
Much of the traffic I generate originates from the Danish e-Infrastructure Collaboration 'researcher network'. The wireless connection is over eduroam. Could the problem be something to do with a change in the IP address of the instance? (Amazon specify that regions must be set for instances, but I am not sure if the system would discriminate between eduroam and ethernet traffic from the same institution. I have not systematically tested the issue enough to see if the same fault occurs when changing from working from home and / or another business premises.
And another thing....the issue has already been mentioned here of 'status bad_alloc'. I appreciate that the models with a large number of cameras and with strong geometry pose the greatest demands on the memory in the model creation stage. In the forthcoming payment plans, will be be able to run on the higher capacity G3 instances.
An alternative to this issue would be to able to move the light source in the dense cloud classes mode. Agisoft oc3 format can only be opened in a limited number of applications, but the speed of Metashape's ability to handle very large point clouds is admirable. It is a pity that we cannot harness that potential a little more. With the ability to create bigger and bigger models, this will become a more important issue over time.
Regards,
James