We’ve fixed a bug in the app that would cause a crash when closing a document on certain system configurations. This issue is now fixed, so if you experience any trouble please contact us!
1.4.5 Update
February 14th, 2010New Website Look
February 10th, 2010We’re pleased to announce a redesign of the site. Love it? Hate it? Leave a comment!
1.4.4 Update
February 3rd, 2010Today someone pointed out a bug in the calculation of person’s ming gua. This only affects a small subsection of dates. Updating to the newest version will correct all calculations.
Chinese Language Version
November 24th, 2009We are pleased to announce our first international version of Twenty-Four Mountains, now in English and Chinese. We owe it all to Bruce Chang of Taiwan for his generous assistance!
Last Update Broke by Lib Crypto, issue resolved
November 24th, 2009I’m happy to announce an update that should fix any issues with the app not launching due to incompatible system versions of libcrypto. Hopefully this didn’t affect too many people and judging from the lack of emails regarding it didn’t. If it did, thank you for your patience!!
Twenty-Four Mountains 1.4.2 Update
October 6th, 2009We are pleased to announce an update to Twenty-Four Mountains! This update includes a fix for Snow Leopard and several other improvements.
We’ve added a preference where you can rotate the Ba Zhai over the floor plan instead of rotating the floor plan, thanks to input from some of our users. In addition this version will automatically launch as a 64-bit process when available and includes other minor bug fixes.
Initially we were going to include chinese language support with this update, but we had to update before we finished the support for Chinese due to the bug fixes for Snow Leopard.
Current users can select “Check for updates…” from the Twenty-Four Mountains’ application menu, or can be manually downloaded from here.
Snow Leopard Bug
September 18th, 2009It appears that there’s been some changes made in Snow Leopard that are causing a crash in the Flying star window. We are tracking it now and will have an update that addresses this issue ready shortly. This update will most likely include other features, such as taking advantage of the 64-bit runtime on capable processors, and support for the Chinese language.
We thank you for your patience while we address this issue.
1.4.1 Update
August 9th, 2009In the last update we moved the Annual star when it really have been left alone.
Click here to download the latest update or open up your copy of Twenty-Four Mountains and click “Check for Updates…” under it’s main menu.
New Website Look
August 9th, 2009We’ve changed the look our website! We’re still having fun playing with the look of the site and the overall look is still subject to change at anytime.
We’re also trying out some great CSS3 features, so some browsers that are a little slow at adopting web standards (yes, we’re talking about you Internet Explorer) might not be able to render it completely accurate. Other popular browsers such as FireFox or Safari will handle it better.
Another great thing about moving to WordPress is that people can comment to the blog. So now you can rant to your hearts content.
1.4 Update
August 8th, 2009What’s new in version (v 1.4 )
- Enhanced layout of menus and added a contextual menu to the Meta Map view.
- Reduced the overall memory footprint for the application.
- New enhancements to the Centroid Editing window. Points can be selected and re-positioned anytime during editing.
- Full undo/redo support.
The star chart location of Annual star was moved to the conventional place under the Mountain star.- Corrected the calculation of the Annual star. It can also now be flown separately.
- Updated view settings panel.