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                       Q. How do I update my product   license? 
                           
                        A: When you run AutoSignal, go to the help menu and   select "Update Product License." Enter your new license code. Hit the "Update   License Code" button.   
                      
                           
                      
 Q. Why does my system slow down when I   run Short-Time Fourier Transforms and Continuos Wavelet Transforms? What can I   do to improve performance? 
                           
                        A: The Short-Time Fourier Transform   and Continuous Wavelet Transform options are particularly memory intensive. For   the STFT, a separate FFT is generated for each segment. Similarly, separate FFTs   are made for each scale or frequency in the CWT. For memory reasons, AutoSignal   limits the number of STFT segments (time snapshots) to a maximum that will be in   the vicinity of 512 and the number of evaluated CWT frequencies is limited to a   maximum of 100.  
   
                        The STFT is especially prone to using up available   memory. In the CWT, zero padding is only used to prevent wraparound effects in   the convolution. No additional memory is used as a consequence of zero padding.   In the STFT, however, zero padding results in additional spectral frequencies   whose magnitudes must be stored in memory. In both cases, the spectral data is   fitted to a bicubic B-spline for 3D rendering and surface integration.   AutoSignal limits the total rendering grid to 16,384 elements. If the spectral   grid is larger than this, an averaging decimation is used. An STFT or CWT   surface is then stored as a grid of B-spline coefficients that consumes yet more   memory. 
   
                        The amount of physical memory (RAM) free for AutoSignal's use is   shown in the main status window in the Mem field. When dealing with large data   sets, particularly WAV files, it is not difficult to exhaust this memory. When   this happens, Windows uses the hard disk for memory operations. Excessive disk   activity and extremely slow processing and procedure closure times will result   if the physical memory is insufficient. 
   
                        To best conserve memory resources   with the STFT, zero pad the segments only when absolutely necessary, and do so   only to the extent this is needed for frequency resolution. Further, avoid high   overlap settings which result in such a large number of segments. The relation   with overlap is not linear. A modest increase in overlap may significantly   increase the number of segments and the amount of memory required. Although   AutoSignal permits overlaps as high as 90%, there is usually little benefit   beyond 50-70%. 
   
                        For the CWT, the 35 frequency default is usually adequate.   When very low frequencies are present, 35 logarithmic frequencies generally   suffice. When both very low and high frequencies are present, a higher frequency   count may be required. In the CWT, the memory relationship is linear. Doubling   the frequency count doubles the amount of physical memory needed. Typically,   there is little to gain beyond 50-60 CWT frequencies. 
   
                        If these guidelines   are insufficient to prevent the hard disk thrashing and drastically diminished   performance that results from exhausting physical memory, you can try breaking   up the large data stream into smaller separate data sets. Given the relatively   low cost of RAM, upgrading to 64, 96, or 128 Mb may be a good investment if you   will be doing a good deal of non-stationary analysis of large data streams.   
                        
                           
                      
 Q. How can I make sure I have the   appropriate signal space for multicomponent radioactive decay   data? 
                           
                        A: The Prony Spectrum procedure is useful for fitting   waveforms consisting of damped sinusoids as well as fitting data that consist of   multiple simultaneous first order exponential decays. Since a damped sinusoid   requires two eigenmodes of signal space to be represented, and an exponential   decay requires only a single eigenmode, AutoSignal seeks to automatically set   the component count in the Prony procedure based upon the type of signal   elements present. If a component's frequency is less than 1e-8*Nyquist, it is   treated as a real exponential. If the Allow Real Exp option is checked, the   component is assigned one eigenmode of signal space. Otherwise, the component is   not included in the Prony fit. If a component's frequency is non-zero, it is   assumed to be a damped or undamped sinusoid, and two eigenmodes of signal space   are assigned. 
   
                        When modeling continuously decreasing multicomponent   radioactive decay data, use one unit of signal space for each component present.   For three different components that have appreciably different half-lives, the   signal space should be set to 3 rather than 6.                         
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