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Re: Re[2]: Windows 2000 v's NT4.0 SP 5 for 2000i



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Yes, I draw trendlines in realtime time with no crashes....on a dual PIII
600mhz, Tyan S1834 motherboard W2k OS.  TS runs quite well .  Can't say as
I've ever had a crash drawing/adjusting a trendline.  I am not going to try
it on Monday, now because it will be guaranteed to crash after that
statement.

bobr

----- Original Message -----
From: "Zoran Gayer" <elliottwave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, March 23, 2002 8:13 PM
Subject: RE: Re[2]: Windows 2000 v's NT4.0 SP 5 for 2000i


> There is such a diverse opinion on 2000i and operating on this or that
> platform and operating system.
>
> I suspect the problem is on how it is used and what is used. On a moving
> average it may have no problem at all.  It will work real time with
> absolutely no problems.
>
> But if you want to adjust a trend line while real time data is flowing,
> it falls over on any OS or computer you may chose.
>
> What we need is a specific action that 2000i fails to do otherwise we
> are comparing oranges and lemons. All judgments must be based on a
> standard.
>
> Is there anybody that can draw a TRENDLINE IN REAL TIME and keep
> adjusting it without 2000i crashing? I suspect the answer is no.
>
> Zoran
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Simon Dawson [mailto:si@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Sunday, March 24, 2002 8:52 AM
> To: omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: Re[2]: Windows 2000 v's NT4.0 SP 5 for 2000i
>
>
> >[snip]
> >weird behavior, and other glitches.  The people with good experiences
> >say they installed it on a fresh Win2k or sometimes even on Win98 and
> >everything is fine.  The people with problems usually say they've
> >installed it on a fresh Win2k too.
> >
> >Those of you who have solid TS2k's, any idea HOW you did it?  I'm
> >sure there are a lot of people who'd love to know.
>
> Well, I've reinstalled TS2k on Win2k more times than I want to remember
> over the last year, and I'd say in general, the MOST important thing is
> to keep to an absolute minimum what you install on your machine.
>
> Every added app is something else that can screw up your stability..
> particularly oddball (no offence mb) 3rd party apps; internet speeders,
> downloader tools, virus checkers, firewalls etc etc. Only install what
> you
> -really- need.
>
> Also, get the latest drivers of everything (screen, sound, network,
> etc),
> and once it's all working, do NOT muck with it.
>
> I've had machines that went from stable to unusable simply because I
> mucked about with changing screen sizes etc. Some of these 3rd party
> drivers are VERY badly written. If it works, and its stable, for your
> own
> sanity, leave it -well- alone :)
>
> Now, things are pretty good, but it took me a few goes (and lots of
> pain). I have an absolute minimum of apps, I don't touch the drivers,
> and I'm happy. Everything else goes on a different machine. It's worth
> forking out for another machine just for personal sanity..
>
> Si
>