Hi, On 04/26/2018 12:35 AM, Tom Van Baak wrote: > Hi Gary, > >> As requested, here is my raw data: http://pi5.rellim.com/1d.log.gz > > I'm having a close look. These are quite a few bad data points and that > partly explains why your ADEV plots were off. Trim the file at, say, line > 71000 and try again; the results will be much better. > > I'll post an in-depth report later. There are interesting things in the data. > You're going to have lots of fun with your new TICC and GPS boards... > >> I'd love to use TimeLab, or Stable32. But they seem to be closed source, > > Nope, not closed source. > > John Miles includes all the source in the TimeLab installation. > http://www.ke5fx.com/timelab/readme.htm > Ask him for a zip of the installation if you can't/won't run the setup exe.
It installs nicely with wine. > Bill Riley very recently donated his Stable32 source tree to IEEE and so that > tool joins the club too. > https://ieee-uffc.org/frequency-control/frequency-control-software/stable32/ > Not sure where the source repo is but someone on the list will know, or know > when it will be ready. Long thread here: > https://www.febo.com/pipermail/time-nuts/2018-January/108320.html What you get from IEEE is the compiled format. There is a non-public repo for the sources, with the aim of maintaining it into the future. In the package of sources exists a Linux port of the FrequenC library, and Python wrapper. Should get back to that code and effort. > Someone who routinely uses these apps on non-Windows or non-x86 machines can > comment on how to do it. I've used them both under Wine for Linux, and that helped me greatly. Cheers, Magnus _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
