The new 4.58 app has a lot of fixes behind the scenes for bugs you hopefully didn't see causing trouble at all. The only thing you should notice is that it shouldn't write to your harddisk nearly every second like before, but now depending on your preferences ("Write to disk at most every ...").
BM

new 4.58 einstein units
)
> everything is fine .
> but the 4.58 units are 5 minutes slower as prvious e@h version on a P4 3.0GHz
>
I've had the exact same run times, but the results that I'm uploading have been betw 60-100kb in size instead of the usual 300-500kb.
> I've had the exact same run
)
> I've had the exact same run times,
That's how it should be.
> but the results that I'm uploading have
> been betw 60-100kb in size instead of the usual 300-500kb.
Yes, one of the new features is the compression of the output file. We added this a while ago, the first app having it was the Darwin version, the next Linux app will do this, too.
BM
BM
Hi Liberto, > Well, I do
)
Hi Liberto,
> Well, I do have another question, and it is regarding as to when can we expect
> the new application after the 4.58 to appear; as I assume we will start seeing
> those nice red waves which go vanishing as they start from the upper left
> corner until they become an almost unnoticeable pink color closer to the
> center, plus the stronger yellow color that goes from one star to the other in
> the global sky constelations!
We've been discussing your posting for a while and still can't sort out
what you're talking about... If you expect to actually *see* gravitational
waves on your screen, you might be lucky and be the first human ever...
Talking about *red* light: the laser emits in the invisible range.
> If everything continues as of today, the only thing we can say is
> congratulations guys!! you are doing an excelent job!.
Thanks. If you knew what's going on behind the scenes :-) Stay tuned.
Hi Liberto, > Well, I do
)
Hi Liberto,
> Well, I do have another question, and it is regarding as to when can we expect
> the new application after the 4.58 to appear; as I assume we will start seeing
> those nice red waves which go vanishing as they start from the upper left
> corner until they become an almost unnoticeable pink color closer to the
> center, plus the stronger yellow color that goes from one star to the other in
> the global sky constelations!
We've been discussing your posting for a while and still can't sort out
what you're talking about... If you expect to actually *see* gravitational
waves on your screen, you might be lucky and be the first human ever...
Talking about *red* light: the laser emits in the invisible range.
> If everything continues as of today, the only thing we can say is
> congratulations guys!! you are doing an excelent job!.
Thanks. If you knew what's going on behind the scenes :-) Stay tuned.