Just tried the new KProbe version (thanks for the tip, KCK).
The drive information has been augmented with the assigned letter and an additional digit. In my case, version 1.1.13 reports:
- Code: Select all
Selected Drive: 2-1-0 J:LITE-ON LTR-48246S SS0B
Previously:
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Selected Drive: 2-1 LITE-ON LTR-48246S SS0B
My drive is secondary slave, hence 2-1. My guess is that the -0 is the SCSI ID.
The new MInfo 1.4 also shows 1.4 in the title bar now.
KProbe 1.1.13 and MInfo 1.4
do not work with NT4 (prior versions did). No drives are found: MInfo dies and the selector widget in Kprobe is blank.
The error counts haven't changed significantly with program version- I tried a good disk and my "crappy bleached audio disk" (CBAD) with C1max > 2400 and C2max > 300. The CBAD seems to have deteriorated further, however- ave C1 is ca. 10% greater and C2 20% higher than 8 weeks ago.
KCK:
It looks like MInfo now works the same with your system as it does for the rest of us. You aren't the only one to wish for a slightly (20%) larger standard window.
I verified your experience with window and PNG sizes by going the same route you did but using the highest resolution that my monitor didn't choke on (1280x1024).
The size of the generated PNGs apparently depends on the size of the main window and this in turn depends on the extent that system fonts (those depending on the dpi value) are used. The new version of KProbe apparently no longer uses system fonts in the main window, which is why it's now smaller your case. The setup dialog still does, and apparently the window size is calculated on the basis of "normal fonts" so that it is too small for the 120dpi fonts used and the information is clipped.
With Version 1.1.12, I got 720x391 for a 1-chart PNG using 1280x1024 and 120dpi. It
wasn't clipped.
The size of the generated PNGs in 1.1.13 is independent of the resolution and agrees with what I've seen all along: 585x343 for 1 chart files. The number of bytes, of course, depends on details of the plots. Most of mine are ca. 6-8k. The y-size depends on the number of info lines and if the charts are combined or not, e.g. V1.1.6 did not show the manufacturer and had 585x328 PNGs. A 2-chart PNG is 585x551. Sizes determined with IE6 (maximized).
However, all these problems do not show up under XP if you request "large fonts" on the display panel, without changing "advanced" settings to 120 dpi. (Sorry if some of these panel names aren't quite right- I'm using a German version of XP). I don't really know what advantage there is to manually setting the 120 dpi fonts. I've had a some hideous problems in printing shared Excel tables under NT4 that result from my using large (120dpi) and another person having small (96dpi) fonts. I find the small fonts difficult to read at times, but had to switch for compatibility. Under XP, apparently, we can choose larger text without running into this problem unless we expliclity invoke it.
So why do that? (OK- I know that older windows don't have that option, so it's best to do the fonts cleanly).
G