WHATSNEW.TXT	History of changes.
Copyright (c) 1996 by Christopher S L Heng. All rights reserved.
----------------------------------------------------------------

$Id: whatsnew.txt 1.8 1996/10/08 14:44:45 chris Exp $ /*

In the text that follows, "[Linux]" means that the item applies only
to the Linux version of LOGTIME; "[Windows]" means that the item
applies only to the Windows version of LOGTIME; and "[All]" means
that the item applies to both the Windows and Linux versions of LOGTIME.


WHAT'S NEW IN VERSION 1.21
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This is a bug fix release. There are no new features.

* [Windows] The Options | Charges dialog box has been updated to
reflect the new capability of LOGTIME of handling charge units other
than one second and one minute. In particular, the text of the Rounding
options have been updated.

* [Linux] [Bug fix] A bug in install.sh surfaces if BOTH these conditions
are true: 1) you allowed install.sh to modify your PPP scripts in an
earlier installation; 2) you now use install.sh but do not allow it
to modify your PPP scripts. If both the conditions are true at the same
time, the install.sh from version 1.20 will still modify your PPP scripts.
This is fixed in version 1.21.

* [All] Updated documentation.


WHAT'S NEW IN VERSION 1.20
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

* [All] LOGTIME now supports units of any multiple of seconds (up to
32767). Previously it only supported units of either 1 second or 1
minute. If your ISP charges according to, say, a 3 minute block of time,
LOGTIME should be able to handle it now (if configured correctly).

* [Windows] The Options | Peak Times dialog box has been revamped to
make it easier to use.

* [Linux] [Bug fix] The installation shell script now installs documentation
with mode 644 instead of 744.

* [Windows] [Bug fix] Options | Font now saves the new font size corectly
to LOGTIME.INI.

* [All] Updated documentation.


WHAT'S NEW IN VERSION 1.10
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1. [Linux] The Linux version of LOGTIME now has installation and
deinstallation scripts.

2. [Linux] The verbose option of the Linux version of LOGTIME is now
slightly more informative.

3. [Linux] Both ELF and a.out binaries of LOGTIME are now included.

4. [Windows] The Windows version of LOGTIME now looks for its help file
in the directory from which it was run regardless of the data directory.
Previously, if you changed the data directory, it would look for the
help file in the data directory. This change of behaviour makes it
easier to use LOGTIME with multiple configurations and data files
(which is useful if you are connected to more than one ISP).

5. [Windows] When a second instance of the Windows version of LOGTIME was
invoked, and the first instance was minimised (iconised), LOGTIME would
activate the first instance of the program but it would not restore the
window. This has been fixed.

6. [Windows] When a second instance of the Windows version of LOGTIME was
invoked, and the first instance had a popup window (such as a dialog box)
open, LOGTIME would activate the main window of the first instance of the
program instead of the pop up. This irritating behaviour has been fixed.

7. [Windows] The menu item "Hide Button Bar" was never displayed on the
Options menu in spite of what the documentation claims. Instead, the Options
menu always displayed the item as "Show Button Bar" even if the button bar
was already enabled. This has been fixed.

8. [All] Documentation reorganisation. The old documentation had
information duplicated everywhere (logtime.1, logtime.hlp, readme.txt)
which made maintenance difficult.

9. [All] Updated documentation.


WHAT'S NEW IN VERSION 1.00
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Initial version. Everything's new. :-)
