![]() ![]() All I can tell you is that it hurts! I did convince them to let me examine the CT scans out of curiosity, but to my non-medically-trained eyes, it was just a big black blob next to some lighter blobs.Īnyway, as of last week, I'm back home again. They think it started with a mild appendicitis which led to the abscess forming from the appendix. If things don't work out with the antibiotics, I could still end up back in hospital again for an operation. It's not exactly pleasant, but not life threatening.ĭue to the position, the doctors don't want to operate for fear of damaging things in the process, and so were treating me around the clock with IV antibiotics to reduce the size as well as giving me lots of pain killers. I've been rather ill recently - I just spent 16 days in hospital due to a nasty abdominal abscess (around 5cm in diameter) which has been pushing all my internal organs around. Just a quick post to let people know what's been happening. Thanks to everybody who helped me through it! On a personal note, this release marks my return to coding, after a longer than expected period of illness and recovery. So go and grab a copy from the Download Page right now and enjoy. Of course, this is a free upgrade if you've already paid for PCalc 2 or 3. There's a full list of all the changes here. ![]() This was one of the most common feature requests after the original release of PCalc 3! Thirdly - and purely for some eye-candy I'll admit - I've added a new calculator style to the application which looks just like the PCalc Dashboard widget.Hopefully this will be appreciated by the engineer types out there. Secondly, I've added Engineering Notation support to the application and also to the Dashboard widget (the widget also gains Scientific Notation support).Functions can do anything that is possible with AppleScript, including displaying dialogs, calling scripting additions, and talking to other applications. Not only is PCalc itself fully scriptable, but you can now write your own functions and conversions in AppleScript instead of the old PCalc code. Firstly, and most importantly, I've added extensive AppleScript support to the application.It's going to cost $9.99 in the US - pricing will vary in other countries, but in that range. It has been redesigned from the ground up with the handheld experience in mind. LIke the desktop app, PCalc for the iPhone includes an extensive set of unit conversions, constants, a paper tape, an RPN mode, engineering and scientific notation, as well as support for hexadecimal, octal and binary calculations. All being well, it should be available immediately when the store opens for business.Īpple has asked us not to show any screenshots from iPhone apps until after the store goes live, so I will respect their wishes (and mighty legal teams) and not put anything up here yet. PCalc for the iPhone (and iPod touch) is now ready for release, and has been submitted to the iPhone App Store this afternoon. So I can finally talk a bit about what I've been working on for the last six months!
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