besides that thread has been quiet in my emails...
but he also said it wasn't mandatory to switch if we felt uneasy about it until all bugs were resolved.
As I said, it's probably a simple oversight and he forgot to remove the time bomb code from 2.1.0.110 when he released it publicly. It happens, no one is perfect, assuming that's what happened here and it wasn't some sort of weird .NET/Windows glitch having to do with the year rolling over to 2026.Anyway, my hunch is that the ticking time bomb code wasn't scrubbed before 2.1.0.110 was promoted to an official public release.
I can attest to that. I updated my SDS200 and my refrigerator stopped working 2 days later.It's also the nature of the beast when Rick adds new features or functionality, that something isn't going to be perfect the first time around, and it might even break something else.
Is your refrigerator now running?I can attest to that. I updated my SDS200 and my refrigerator stopped working 2 days later.
Ah, that was probably due to the IV&D fix. Also make sure your fridge is set to 2.I can attest to that. I updated my SDS200 and my refrigerator stopped working 2 days later.
That was absolutely the issue. People were joining the Google group and were installing preview versions (aka beta, or even alpha in some cases), and never bothering to keep up to date. Rick would subsequently release a dozen or more previews that fixed numerous bugs. Someone would then come along with a badly outdated preview asking for help on bugs that had already been addressed long ago. That was the impetus for Rick to code a ticking time bomb into each preview release. I believe initially it was 12 months, then he expanded it to 18 months. Which by the way is extremely generous given the ever-evolving nature of Unitrunker previews (there were 74 previews of 2.0, 110 previews of 2.1, and so far 37 previews of 2.2).
Participation in the Google group and installing those preview versions is entirely voluntary, however Rick has always asked that early adopters stay as current as possible to avoid having to support many stages of the software's evolution. I don't think that's an unreasonable request, especially for such feature rich software that he has developed for over two decades at no charge to end users.
Anyway, my hunch is that the ticking time bomb code wasn't scrubbed before 2.1.0.110 was promoted to an official public release.
I can attest to that. I updated my SDS200 and my refrigerator stopped working 2 days later.
Must be a Motorola.I can attest to that. I updated my SDS200 and my refrigerator stopped working 2 days later.