MX Administrative Interface: Difference between revisions

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When Steve Loft made his original cumulus software (legacy cumulus 1) available for others to use, it was natural for him to use "user interface" as a collective term for all the [[Cumulus_Screenshots|various screens]] that he included with that software.   
When Steve Loft made his original cumulus software (legacy cumulus 1) available for others to use, it was natural for him to use "user interface" as a collective term for all the [[Cumulus_Screenshots|various screens]] that he included with that software.   


When he worked on Cumulus 2 alpha builds, he needed to explain how the design of his new software was different, and he talked about it separating "engine" and "user interface".  Basically, the engine read information from the weather station, calculated derivatives, and monitored extreme records. The user interface was a web server generated by the engine, here you could amend settings, and see a basic output (the alpha Cumulus 2 never had ability to feed any information to an external web server).
When he worked on Cumulus 2 alpha builds, he needed to explain how the design of his new software was different, and he talked about it separating "engine" and "user interface".  Basically, the engine read information from the weather station, calculated derivatives, and monitored extreme records. The user interface was a web server generated by the engine, here you could amend settings, and see those weather derivatives (the alpha Cumulus 2 never had ability to feed any information to an external web server).


Thus Steve Loft used the same terminology (engine and user interface) for his Cumulus 3 beta (also known as MX). When Mark Crossley took over development and brought MX out of beta, he added much more to the web server that the engine generated, and he talks about "the code" where Steve used "engine" and he uses "admin interface" for the enhanced collection of web pages generated by the code allowing you to do administrative tasks like correcting log files (both data logs and extreme record logs). The new interface also displays your data in more ways.
Thus Steve Loft used the same terminology (engine and user interface) for his Cumulus 3 beta (also known as MX). When Mark Crossley took over development and brought MX out of beta, he added much more to the web server that the engine generated, and he talks about "the code" where Steve used "engine" and he uses "admin interface" for the enhanced collection of web pages generated by the code allowing you to do administrative tasks like correcting log files (both data logs and extreme record logs). The new interface also displays your data in more ways.


=How to see and use the Admin Interface=
=How to see and use the Admin Interface=
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