Mytale:
Last night, looking at z-wave details, thought I'd 'fix' a slow connection.
Wound up excluding a switch and re-included using app swap-no problem.
Alas, I forgot that it was associated with a door contact sensor.
So, today, there's the 6-second delay, discussed recently, symptomatic of no hub z-wave radio comms, and just device to device communication.
Using your tweaker device, and in part the basic z-wave tool, I was able to determine which devices were associated and then, un-associated them.
I have another association, in the basement, that I'm going to see if I can live without.
Hopefully, I don't have another one or two still lurking.
It's not worth the hassle, especially with the delay.
Thanks.
I have not added association stuff to the scanner tool yet. I want to eventually incorporate everything form the "tweaker" tool into the scanner. For now, here is the old tweaker tool which can set and remove associations: [BETA] ZWave Tweaker port from ST
Yes, I discovered that.
I just removed three associated with a door contact with the tweaker.
There's always some red stuff with Java in the message in logs, so I made sure they were removed with the basic tool.
Basic tool is decimal, while tweaker is hex, and hex is what you need.
Now to search out a couple more associations in the basement.
Yeah battery devices are especially fun. I do have in my line of ideas to have the scanner support battery devices properly as well, where it will wait for it to wake up then send the commands. Lots of ideas, not enough time and motiviation.
On the latest, when I scan assoc groups, it's only giving me info for group 1 (lifeline). 10 times the same. I know there's an association based on the basic tool, but would like to see it as well in tweaker.
got it: had to print assoc scan.
Sometimes in that tweaker app you have to press the cleanup button, refresh the page, set your association groups in the settings again, save, then scan. Also, are you setting the groups to scan in the settings then saving?
Typically group 1 (lifeline) will get ALL reports sent to it. So if you have the hub in any other groups it would get duplicated messages, which could cause issues or just logging spam depending on the driver. Should only need the hub in group 1.
I have the group numbers for both Eaton devices via the links below, but I am new to home automation and need some more specific instructions on creating the association between these two devices once I have the tweaker installed.
This morning I tweaked a recipe and I wasn't even cooking. I was reading Twitter (as I do every morning after reading The New York Times, Google Reader, and checking Facebook) and I saw my friend Elise Tweet about her beet hummus. I clicked to the recipe (see here) and then I Tweeted to her: "Have you considered adding horseradish to your beet hummus? I wonder if that'd work?" She Tweeted back: "love the idea of adding horseradish to the beet hummus. yummmmmmm." That's what's known as a Tweet tweak and it's just one example of the many tweaks I've been tweaking, lately, in my newfound life as a recipe tweaker.
This tweak streak started a few weeks ago when Craig and I threw a little party for our February birthdays and, being the person that I am, I bought way too many lemons and limes. When the party was over, I used the lemons to make lemon sherbet and the limes? What would I do with those limes? I decided to make a favorite cake--The Barefoot Contessa's lemon cake (recipe here)--and to substitute the limes for the lemons. And thus was born the Leftover Lime Cake:
The next tweak I tweaked was an idea I got after reading your comments on my Heaven & Hell Cauliflower Pasta post. Brenda, a commenter, asked: "The fennel seeds are used whole? Not ground? Not toasted?"
Well, yes, Brenda they're normally used whole. It's not like I even came up with that, it's in the original Zuni Cafe recipe, but your comment got me thinking. What if I did toast the fennel seeds first? And what if I then ground them up in a coffee grinder?
As always happens when you toast and grind a spice, the fennel flavor here was much more pronounced. I also took it easier on the salt this time around after some of you complained that the dish was too salty (a strange complaint, I think, since--besides the anchovies--you're always in control of how much salt you add. It's not like I gave salt amounts!) But still, I'd always been too un-Bloomberglike in my salting of that particular dish, so this time I took it easy. And Craig said: "This is the best version of this you've ever done."
Not all of my tweaks, however, have proved successful. Sometimes what I define as a "tweak" is really just me being lazy. I was excited to make the scallops in Thomas Keller's "Ad Hoc at Home." I followed his instructions to brine them in salt water:
But, when it came time to cook them, I ignored his instruction to use clarified butter (which would take a little time to make) and, instead, "tweaked" the recipe with olive oil as the new fat. The resulting scallops--which were supposed to be golden brown and crusty--were sad, soggy, unseared specimens (you can see them at the top of this post).
But all wasn't lost. I "tweaked" the recipe so instead of serving them with whatever it is Thomas Keller wants you to serve them with, I served them on a bed of cabbage cooked with bacon and wine (a recipe I learned from Rebecca Charles when we made our fish musical. Recipe here.)
So even a bad tweak has a silver tweak lining. And that's the point, isn't it? The beginner cook cooks nervously, makes mistakes and follows a recipe like it's the written word of God. The intermediate cook might make a change here or there, but does so cautiously. It's only when you make big, bold changes--swapping limes for lemons, grinding and toasting your spices, ignoring the Mighty Keller--that you can call yourself a real cook. AKA: a recipe tweaker.
Q: Where is the portable version?
A: When installing the tweaker, choose the Portable type of install, as shown on the image below.
The portable version will be extracted to the selected folder.
Multi-page scrolling is only triggered inside the area where program icons are displayed (the area between the task view button and the system try). Instead, make multi-page scrolling available on the complete taskbar. That way users can benefit from both features. You can minimize/restore programs and you can scroll pages if you move the mouse on the start button (or search field/search button/task view button/system tray).
Is it possible, please, to add a secondary checkbox for volume control over taskbar in order to choose to work over the empty space of taskbar (c)?
In this way, using a+b+c will split the taskbar space more evenly between both commands.
Thank you
Sort of unrelated, but this happens to me even without loop tweaker in 10.0.20 (97) in both Wavelab Pro and Elements on macOS. Loop markers are completely ignored. Works fine in 9.5 Tried reformatting my hard drive and doing fresh install of 10.0.20 (97), same problem. (and 9.5 still works fine)
I recently bought WaveLab Pro 10 for the Mac and have not been able to use it since I only have problems with loops and the Loop Tweaker. Version 10.0.30 is already installed. The bugs only seem to exist on the Mac version! I made 2 videos, which you can download here:
But: If I stop the loop and start it again, the old area will be looped again before I have moved the right marker. The cursor simply goes through the marker and loops at the point where the marker was previously.
Video 2 (Steinberg has already reproduced these two bugs, so a fix can be expected for this):
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