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That is the problem. They have failed to understand what is required at the design stage and made a couple of howlers. I think they are only just realising it now. Raymond has decided that some things should not be changed at this stage. An obvious one is truncating time stamps to 1 second when storing historical data. Sadly I think that the correct decision is the tougher one. Papering over cracks seldom ends well.
Can you help answer these questions from other members on NexusFi?
I am Mac ignorant. On a PC I mean click the left mouse button when holding the Ctrl Key with the cursor on the Right Y-axis and any chart I've tried moves up and down. It really make things easier with the Ladder Charts.
I hope I've answered your question. Somehow I remember Macs having just one button, but it has been years since I touched one.
This is for my version of MacBook (one year + old now) and because I prefer to use the mouse/mouse pad in-built (I don't use external mouse). And it is even seamlessly easy !
The new MacBook has easier mouse/mouse pad "clicking". Just placing one, or two fingers on the mouse pad achieves what you will need a combination of keyboard/mouse activities on PC. In any case, the normal Mac mouse (for desktop Mac or MacMini), which is the same as the PC mouse, has the same "clicking" features as PC mouse (may be even better).
Remember that Apple machines have always had mouse and GUI interface since its inception (way-back in 1980+), years before PC has the first mouse/GUI-based interface OS (the Windows 1.x OS).
"At this we have no plans nor commitments to disclose regarding this issue. "
Please take the time to politely let them know with a new thread or post in their support forum if this is important to you. If we keep raising the issue, and are not too confrontational about it, perhaps they will find a way to address it sooner.
I have a 64 bit operating system but am not able to use NT 6.5. As an alternative I have loaded VMWare and have a 32 bit operating system there on which I run NT. I am interested in the "largeaddresswarefix" you note in your post. Could you point me in the right direction to better understand how I might use the 64 bit OS.
I don't know what has changed, but 7b9 no longer needs a reinstall after a crash. Most importantly, I can start a full workspace. I've sent everything to NT.
Really like the new charting features - That was well thought out.
Wonder if it will run until the close? If so will backup, check fragmentation, reboot and restart.
This is the best 7b9 has acted. Hope it stays like this for the next 2 weeks as I am not changing anything until then. Will do testing of Indicators for the Forum Download Section on my lap top using a single 5 min chart with only one indicator loaded at a time, for both 6.5 & 7b9.
Kept NT 7b9 running for 23.25 hours before stopping to do what I believe is necessary computer maintenance.
Strongly suggest defragging once a day, especially if running Gomi's or Zondor's recording indicators.
When having crashes. Start with a bare chart not an entire workspace, then add one indicator at a time, while connected to a data feed. See what indicator is causing NT to slow down or crash. If things are working keep adding indicators.. After each chart is complete save a workspace. If things go well like they finally did for me you will have a complete workspace saved and can test to see if it loads.
I had a bad day yesterday as well. And forgot to defrag over the weekend. Highly recommend 'Ultimate Defrag'. Many options. Fast.
Another suggestion: you can go through the Registry and move MyDocuments off the System partition to anywhere you want. Next time I install a new OS (perhaps soon), I make a partitition just for Ninja.
Right now defragging system partition and of 15 GIGS in there, over 9 were in fragmented files, I am sure a large amount of them Ninja-related. If you get that into its own little 5 GIG partition, it will be quicker to defrag and also not mess up other system files.
But thanks for the reminder.
Of old the skilled first made themselves invincible to await the enemy's vincibility.
Invincibility lies in oneself. Vincibility lies in the enemy.
Thus the skilled can make themselves invincible.
They cannot cause the enemy's vincibility.
Thus it is said: 'Victory can be known; it cannot be made.'