Power Toto
| Filename | power-toto-202.hqx |
|---|---|
| Size | 3,338.7 KB (3418811 bytes) |
| Mac OS | Mac OS X |
| Downloads | 4 |
Power Toto (PowerToto 2.0.2) is a 2001 Macintosh suite from Tencas Group of Italy for building and analyzing betting systems for European soccer pool and lottery games. Supported formats include Totocalcio, Totogol, Totosei, SuperEnalotto, and Lotto in Italy plus French LotoFoot and Loto Simple, Swiss Toto-R/X and Lotto, and the Austrian Toto and ZahlenLotto.
This upload: the English-language build
This entry is the English localization of the PowerToto 2.0.2 demo ("PowerToto Demo 2.0.2 ENG"), with English menus, the Readme now file, and the bundled PowerToto Help. It is functionally identical to the parallel Italian release; the two were issued in September 2001 to widen reach beyond Italian-speaking users on the same Mac codebase.
Suite features
PowerToto's standout claim is real-time generation and constraint of large betting systems, with system reduction in seconds on faster PowerMacs. It offers several constraint methods, boolean operations between systems, multiple system views (combinations, summary, constraint icons, grouped), column groupings, drag and drop, an Italian Lotto archive, an Inspector floating window, and import from TotoTurbo, Silvergol, and Lingotto. A multithreaded engine built on the Thread Manager handles long jobs.
Demo restrictions
This DEMO release is identical to the paid product except that championship-day and Lotto archive import and export are disabled, and saving or printing of generated systems (in any view, form, or summary) is locked out. Tencas warned the demo received less QA than the full release and may exhibit edge-case bugs.
System requirements
Minimum: Mac OS 8.6 with CarbonLib 1.1, 32 MB RAM (8 MB free for PowerToto), 640x480 256-color screen, PowerPC. Recommended: Mac OS 9.1 or X with CarbonLib 1.2.5, 64 MB RAM, 800x600 in thousands of colors, a G3 processor, and an Internet connection for live archive downloads.
This file is part of the MacTrove archive. See the Thank You page for the upstream mirrors we rely on. It is BinHex encoded — use The Unarchiver to decode it.