Inching Forward
• Chris Liscio
• Chris Liscio
Work continues on FuzzMeasure 1.4, and my graphing code has grown considerably since then. I wrote lots and lots of graphing code, and yet so much more code remains for me to write. When will it end? </p> <p> Of course, with a huge load of work should come a huge load of changes. FuzzMeasure 1.4 will surely make your graph-related dreams come true, as I plan to make the time and frequency domain displays as full-featured as possible this time around. </p> <p> My motivation to get FuzzMeasure 1.4 completed has grown even stronger lately, since it seems that the majority of inquiries that I get revolve around features that I currently have planned for FuzzMeasure 1.4. Also, the prospect of getting all these features that I planned to add for so long into FuzzMeasure really excites me. I will finally have the ability to completely replace the full-featured software packages that users can only find on Windows right now. </p> <p> Of course, I have users now who have cast aside their (very expensive) Windows measurement systems in favour of FuzzMeasure, trading some of the extra features in for a superior, intuitive workflow. See below for what one of my users has to say about it. <p> <p> “I keep digging the basic interface more and more. The ability to quickly compare so many different measurements, drag and drop between collections, develop custom collections. wonderful stuff. It has greatly increased my productivity in comparision to the Clio system. Not to mention my mac laptop is far quiter than the PC running clio so my noise floor has dropped considerably.” </p> <p> FuzzMeasure 1.3 obviously makes me very proud, as it receives lots of praise like this from my users. Unfortunately for my bottom-line, I still need to get it up to snuff in the feature department — especially if I want to have my sales match up with the explosion of interest FuzzMeasure 1.3 has brought along with its release. </p>