It is an executable, dated 1999, which I got from a trusted source and virus checked it with Kaspersky AV, but… at your own risk.
It doesn’t work on my win7-64 machine but works under winXP and may work under win7 etc in some compatibility mode.
What exactly can be “trained” using this program? (I am a Macintosh user since 25 years so unfortunately can’t try it out myself)
It shows what different approach lights look like.
Has anyone tried it?
Yes. It works fine on my Windows 8.1 machine.
I suspect you’re missing a .net framework version or a C++ redistributable.
What it taught me was that there are far too many different combinations of lighting for anyone to be able to remember!
I have Windows 10 and it works for me.
Bit basically isn’t this what books are for?
Have you tried it, mh?
Didn’t try the program; it doesn’t run (64 bit Win10pro).
I was able to try it out. For my 3D printer I bought a “mini PC” off eBay (for 25 Euros) because the printer runs for endless hours and blocks my MacBook Pro during that time which I need for other things. That mini PC arrived in the mail yesterday while I was flying… It has a 1.6GHz Intel Atom processor (32 bit?) and runs Windows XP professional. I tried the approach lights trainer and it works perfectly well (I still can’t see what it might teach you).
The program was developed using LabVIEW 5.0 from National Instruments ( www.ni.com ) – not the most typical programming environment for windows… – so maybe on their site some patches and drivers may be available which make it executable under later versions of MS Windows?