This article is from the Electrochemistry FAQ, by Zoltan Nagy nagy@anl.gov with numerous contributions by others.
The EnAnalize program has been written to perform standard statistical and
spectral analyses of electrochemical noise time records. It is written in
Delphi
V3.0, and requires Windows 95/98 or NT to operate. The current release (alpha
V1.0) has not been fully tested, although it is generally believed to be
working
essentially correctly. Known problems include the poor axis labelling of the
log-log power spectra (this appears to be a limitation of the Delphi Tchart
component that I cannot easily change). The program will handle up to 1 M
points
in the time record, although this will require a large amount of memory for
rapid processing. The display of the graphs requires even more memory than the
calculations, so this is disabled for time records of more than 64 K points
(although the graphs can be re-enabled after loading the time record). The
program will currently only process a single time record, and if you want to
compare current and potential spectra, you will need to save the spectra and
re-
plot with another program.
This program is offered to interested users with absolutely no warranty of any
kind. It must not be used in life critical applications or for any application
where financial or other losses may be incurred as a result of the operation
(correct or otherwise) of the program, or for anything where wrong operation of
the program may cause anything more than mild irritation.
EnAnalize is Copyright Bob Cottis 1998. It is not public domain software. This
alpha test release is freely available to all users, except that it may not be
included in any package, collection or product that is sold for more than a
reasonable cost of copying. Any such redistribution must specifically include
this licence information.
If you accept the above terms, you can download the program from:
http://www.cp.umist.ac.uk/INFO/EnAnalize.htm
This will give the file EnAnalizeZip.exe. This file should be run from within a
suitable directory to extract the contents. This will produce three files:
EnAnalize.exe
RACPkg1.dpl
EnAnalize Read Me.txt
From Explorer you can run the program by double-clicking EnAnalize.exe.
Alternatively you can create a shortcut that will run the program. This must
set
the default directory to that in which the program files are stored.
*******************************************************************************
EnAnalize is courtesy of Bob Cottis, The University of Manchester, Institute of
Science and Technology (UMIST). With problems/questions contact:
BOB.COTTIS@UMIST.AC.UK
 
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