FastStats Analyzer 2.75 serial key or number
FastStats Analyzer 2.75 serial key or number
Site Statistics for winserion.org
The General Statistics Report gives you a quick overview of your web site traffic. Of particular interest are the "Hits", "Total Visiting Users", and "Hits on Pages" fields.
Item | Value |
---|---|
Hits | 214692 |
Total Data Transferred | 2.25 gigabytes |
Total Visiting Users | 24554 |
Time Period | August 10, 2013, 11:21:38 PM to May 26, 2015, 03:32:39 PM |
Average Hits per User | 8.74 |
Average Users per Day | 37.54 |
Average Data Transferred per Day | 3.53 megabytes |
Hits cached by Client | 0 (0.00%) |
Report generated on | May 26, 2015 at 10:00:00 PM |
Incomplete downloads/file requests | 0 (0.00%) |
Log spans a period of | 654 days |
Total failed requests | 18 (0.01%) |
Average Data Transferred per User | 96.17 kilobytes |
Average Hits per Day | 328.28 |
Average Data Transferred per Hit | 11.00 kilobytes |
Hits on Pages | 74278 |
Hits on Files | 18134 |
Hits for Graphics | 120505 |
Need to know where your visitors are? What kind of systems they are using? Your visitor stats can give you that information. Analyzer is up-to-date at recognizing the most recent browsers and operating systems. You need to make sure that your website is viewable best by the technology your visitors are using. You can use visitor reports as a checklist and priority list to make sure your visitors see what you think they are seeing.
The Visiting Domain Name Report displays the domains that most frequently accessed your web site. Domains are servers on the Internet such as AOL or a local Internet Service Provider and are uniquely identified by a number called an IP address, such as 208.219.77.29. Those numbers are translated for people into names, by the Internet Domain Name System (DNS).
Domain Name | Hits | Bandwidth |
---|---|---|
54270312.ftth.concepts.nl | 2565 | 12.61 megabytes |
leda2.kreativmedia.ch | 2216 | 697.03 kilobytes |
fw-pub.helicon.nl | 2103 | 22.31 megabytes |
d0138395.wurnet.nl | 1414 | 136.53 megabytes |
d0105640.wurnet.nl | 1344 | 39.96 megabytes |
crawl-66-249-78-183.googlebot.com | 1102 | 11.36 megabytes |
static.kpn.net | 1097 | 17.28 megabytes |
l0116779.wurnet.nl | 933 | 35.71 megabytes |
95.108.154.252 | 862 | 8.84 megabytes |
d0114287.wurnet.nl | 808 | 81.58 megabytes |
static.kpn.net | 797 | 6.83 megabytes |
spider-5-255-253-126.yandex.com | 697 | 1.91 megabytes |
ip54546eca.speed.planet.nl | 560 | 3.01 megabytes |
ip56588c40.direct-adsl.nl | 455 | 2.44 megabytes |
sd4402213.adsl.online.nl | 453 | 2.44 megabytes |
193.191.138.240 | 447 | 13.23 megabytes |
b110058.yse.yahoo.net | 387 | 916.46 kilobytes |
77-173-163-90.ip.telfort.nl | 385 | 2.07 megabytes |
dhcp-077-248-030-176.chello.nl | 383 | 8.12 megabytes |
crawl-66-249-66-187.googlebot.com | 363 | 1.28 megabytes |
180.ip-5-135-151.eu | 350 | 1.88 megabytes |
156.173.120.106.static.bjtelecom.net | 321 | 380.00 kilobytes |
ip51cd1391.adsl-surfen.hetnet.nl | 321 | 6.21 megabytes |
sd44006c4.adsl.online.nl | 315 | 1.69 megabytes |
ip56585f52.direct-adsl.nl | 314 | 1.70 megabytes |
d0135913.wurnet.nl | 312 | 1.89 megabytes |
195.169.103.98 | 298 | 10.92 megabytes |
5.135.199.19 | 294 | 1.55 megabytes |
dsl-087-195-177-122.solcon.nl | 292 | 3.23 megabytes |
193.190.189.12 | 280 | 3.91 megabytes |
146-71-110-12.static.gorillaservers.com | 280 | 1.49 megabytes |
53509902.cm-6-1c.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 273 | 3.45 megabytes |
transit-sbb.cust.cj2.nl | 270 | 6.14 megabytes |
4dafa9a6.ftth.telfortglasvezel.nl | 261 | 1.28 megabytes |
zora4-08.yandex.ru | 260 | 80.46 kilobytes |
82-168-137-60.ip.telfort.nl | 255 | 3.91 megabytes |
193-190-203-154.milieuinfo.be | 255 | 7.02 megabytes |
dhcp-077-250-063-172.chello.nl | 251 | 2.22 megabytes |
firewall.helicon.nl | 249 | 1.82 megabytes |
ip3e83f59f.speed.planet.nl | 247 | 3.45 megabytes |
dhcp-077-250-052-019.chello.nl | 245 | 1.32 megabytes |
reverse-dns.chicago | 245 | 1.32 megabytes |
d57db7a3.static.ziggozakelijk.nl | 244 | 1.15 megabytes |
d0117056.wurnet.nl | 237 | 11.81 megabytes |
54688d9e.cm-12-1c.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 232 | 2.53 megabytes |
77-173-57-128.ip.telfort.nl | 232 | 6.65 megabytes |
82-171-80-228.ip.telfort.nl | 231 | 3.37 megabytes |
145.108.42.46 | 225 | 2.46 megabytes |
gemeente.defriesemeren.nl | 224 | 2.12 megabytes |
546a4624.cm-12-3b.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 223 | 1.01 megabytes |
surf.tui.nl | 222 | 2.50 megabytes |
g134198.upc-g.chello.nl | 212 | 1.13 megabytes |
ip252-70-208-87.adsl2.static.versatel.nl | 211 | 2.04 megabytes |
sd4400667.adsl.online.nl | 210 | 1.13 megabytes |
ip4da67a91.direct-adsl.nl | 210 | 1.13 megabytes |
65.5.119.67 | 210 | 1.13 megabytes |
host111-155-static.13-188-b.business.telecomitalia.it | 210 | 1.13 megabytes |
79-116-31-242.rdsnet.ro | 210 | 1.13 megabytes |
ip4da42f1e.direct-adsl.nl | 209 | 1.22 megabytes |
crawl-66-249-73-5.googlebot.com | 208 | 636.19 kilobytes |
212-123-158-162.ip.telfort.nl | 196 | 5.91 megabytes |
ded4u.com | 194 | 1.23 megabytes |
82-168-135-134.ip.open.net | 191 | 1.61 megabytes |
77-172-164-26.ip.telfort.nl | 189 | 5.09 megabytes |
static.kpn.net | 189 | 1.74 megabytes |
ip152-69-209-87.adsl2.static.versatel.nl | 187 | 2.06 megabytes |
535019df.static.ziggozakelijk.nl | 183 | 9.17 megabytes |
ip545376ef.speed.planet.nl | 182 | 5.89 megabytes |
ip69-116-212-87.adsl2.static.versatel.nl | 177 | 1.86 megabytes |
195-240-125-54.ip.telfort.nl | 175 | 1.67 megabytes |
s529dd276.adsl.online.nl | 175 | 958.62 kilobytes |
203.237.96.188 | 175 | 962.92 kilobytes |
ip565ac282.direct-adsl.nl | 175 | 166.41 kilobytes |
82-170-110-35.ip.telfort.nl | 175 | 962.80 kilobytes |
c83-251-55-138.bredband.comhem.se | 175 | 962.80 kilobytes |
reverse-dns.chicago | 175 | 962.80 kilobytes |
5418de2f.cm-5-1d.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 175 | 1.19 megabytes |
j57106.upc-j.chello.nl | 170 | 959.35 kilobytes |
proxy.haagnet.net | 169 | 6.77 megabytes |
groep.uit.aeres.nl | 168 | 1.48 megabytes |
ip4daaf148.direct-adsl.nl | 167 | 1.17 megabytes |
ip51cf3e80.direct-adsl.nl | 167 | 1.49 megabytes |
ip5658e3aa.direct-adsl.nl | 167 | 5.97 megabytes |
static.kpn.net | 165 | 1.22 megabytes |
crawl-66-249-67-87.googlebot.com | 162 | 750.21 kilobytes |
83.138.2.141 | 162 | 6.46 megabytes |
uit.aeres.nl | 162 | 1.21 megabytes |
7-75-ftth.on.nl | 161 | 1.73 megabytes |
145.108.42.221 | 160 | 1.25 megabytes |
546a2d85.cm-12-3a.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 160 | 1.80 megabytes |
524b219f.cm-4-4a.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 160 | 8.80 megabytes |
dsl-213-233-214-088.solcon.nl | 158 | 7.04 megabytes |
53539b75.cm-6-4c.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 158 | 678.27 kilobytes |
crawl-66-249-67-103.googlebot.com | 157 | 737.53 kilobytes |
a83-163-150-236.adsl.xs4all.nl | 155 | 6.15 megabytes |
192.99.149.88 | 154 | 286.23 kilobytes |
ip5658d8f8.direct-adsl.nl | 154 | 5.79 megabytes |
31-151-121-112.dynamic.upc.nl | 154 | 1.41 megabytes |
a80-100-45-127.adsl.xs4all.nl | 153 | 1.56 megabytes |
54691a2b.cm-12-2a.dynamic.ziggo.nl | 153 | 2.00 megabytes |
This report displays information about the countries visitors to your site are located in. The geographical information comes from a database that we maintain on our server which associates countries with IP addresses. The database is not guaranteed to be accurate, but we do our best to keep it up to date. The geographic data is provided by http://ip-to-country.webhosting.info/.
Country Name | Hits | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Netherlands | 131503 | 61.25% |
Unknown | 32025 | 14.92% |
United States | 19734 | 9.19% |
Belgium | 5325 | 2.48% |
Spain | 3140 | 1.46% |
Germany | 3019 | 1.41% |
Portugal | 2696 | 1.26% |
Switzerland | 2356 | 1.10% |
Romania | 2244 | 1.05% |
China | 1844 | 0.86% |
Italy | 1578 | 0.74% |
United Kingdom | 1464 | 0.68% |
Russian Federation | 1422 | 0.66% |
France | 1195 | 0.56% |
Sweden | 635 | 0.30% |
Japan | 540 | 0.25% |
Malaysia | 437 | 0.20% |
Czech Republic | 299 | 0.14% |
"Korea, Republic of" | 202 | 0.09% |
Europe | 197 | 0.09% |
Canada | 196 | 0.09% |
Austria | 190 | 0.09% |
Kuwait | 187 | 0.09% |
Denmark | 184 | 0.09% |
Australia | 174 | 0.08% |
Saudi Arabia | 149 | 0.07% |
Ukraine | 115 | 0.05% |
Bulgaria | 109 | 0.05% |
Greece | 103 | 0.05% |
Taiwan | 87 | 0.04% |
Serbia | 85 | 0.04% |
India | 84 | 0.04% |
Hungary | 83 | 0.04% |
Norway | 80 | 0.04% |
Slovakia | 72 | 0.03% |
Brazil | 72 | 0.03% |
Lithuania | 53 | 0.02% |
Israel | 46 | 0.02% |
Turkey | 46 | 0.02% |
Colombia | 44 | 0.02% |
Netherlands Antilles | 43 | 0.02% |
Hong Kong | 39 | 0.02% |
Poland | 38 | 0.02% |
Myanmar | 37 | 0.02% |
Finland | 37 | 0.02% |
Vietnam | 36 | 0.02% |
Malta | 35 | 0.02% |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 35 | 0.02% |
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya | 31 | 0.01% |
Thailand | 30 | 0.01% |
Nigeria | 29 | 0.01% |
Cambodia | 27 | 0.01% |
Sudan | 27 | 0.01% |
Namibia | 26 | 0.01% |
Suriname | 22 | 0.01% |
Morocco | 21 | 0.01% |
Bangladesh | 20 | 0.01% |
Ireland | 20 | 0.01% |
Chile | 18 | 0.01% |
Indonesia | 15 | 0.01% |
Uruguay | 10 | 0.00% |
Peru | 10 | 0.00% |
Kenya | 10 | 0.00% |
Luxembourg | 8 | 0.00% |
Azerbaijan | 7 | 0.00% |
Ethiopia | 7 | 0.00% |
Estonia | 6 | 0.00% |
Lebanon | 5 | 0.00% |
Satellite Provider | 5 | 0.00% |
Montenegro | 4 | 0.00% |
South Africa | 4 | 0.00% |
"Iran, Islamic Republic of" | 3 | 0.00% |
Pakistan | 2 | 0.00% |
Cuba | 2 | 0.00% |
United Arab Emirates | 2 | 0.00% |
Latvia | 2 | 0.00% |
Georgia | 2 | 0.00% |
Philippines | 1 | 0.00% |
Mexico | 1 | 0.00% |
Venezuela | 1 | 0.00% |
The Browser Report tells you what web browsers visitors are using when they access your web site. Tip: use this report to determine whether the browsers visiting your web site support a specific web technology. For example, if most of your users use Netscape 4 or 6, or Internet Explorer 5, then it's safe to use an advanced feature like cascading style sheets.
Browser | Hits | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Opera 7 | 3 | 0.00% |
AOL 7 | 1 | 0.00% |
Internet Explorer 6 | 1444 | 0.69% |
Internet Explorer 5 | 114 | 0.05% |
Internet Explorer 2 | 1 | 0.00% |
Netscape 7 | 8 | 0.00% |
Lynx 2 | 20 | 0.01% |
Firefox | 24458 | 11.75% |
Mozilla | 145785 | 70.05% |
Other Browsers | 36283 | 17.43% |
The Visiting Operating Systems Report tells you what Operating System your visitors are using. Tip: use this report to determine if a web technology is appropriate. If 99% of your visitors use Windows, then you can focus on designing your site for Windows users, with Windows technology such as Active-X controls. But if a significant percentage of your visitors do not use Windows, it would be wise to use a platform independent language like Java.
Operating System | Hits | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Windows ME | 1 | 0.00% |
Windows 98 | 26 | 0.01% |
Windows 2000 | 122 | 0.06% |
Windows 95 | 26 | 0.01% |
Windows XP | 9684 | 4.65% |
Windows NT | 94999 | 45.65% |
Windows | 60 | 0.03% |
Macintosh | 34721 | 16.68% |
Linux | 23338 | 11.21% |
X-Windows | 271 | 0.13% |
Other OSes | 44869 | 21.56% |
Search Engine spiders are robots that traverse your website in order list it on Search Engines. This report shows a breakdown of which spiders have visited your site.
Spider | Hits | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Inktomi Snap Hotbot | 779 | 11.85% |
5618 | 85.44% | |
wise-guys.nl | 103 | 1.57% |
MSN | 75 | 1.14% |
The authenticated users report shows you hits and sessions of a user who logged in to your site using http authentication. If the visitor did not log in, it will show up as "-".
Username | Hits | Sessions | Bandwidth |
---|---|---|---|
- | 210458 | 14514 | 1.96 gigabytes |
WUR\gooss007 | 2459 | 0 | 299.86 megabytes |
These great reports give you detailed information on how your visitors use your site. And all of them are available in the regular version of FastStats Analyzer! If you need great basic stats, check out what FastStats can do! * Detailed breakdown of pages, files, images, and directories pulled from your server. * Graphical and chart views of total hits, broken down into bandwidth, page views, and visitors per day. * Tracking of popular days and hours so that you can schedule necessary downtime most effectively. * Comprehensive summary of query string variables used on your pages, along with the values of those variables.
Page Type analysis measures hits and bandwidth in four categories. A request can be either a * Page: General webpages displayed in a browser. * Image: GIF, JPEG, PNG and other image format files. * File: EXE, PDF, ZIP and other downloadable content. * Misc.: Javascript, CSS and other supporting files.
This report shows a breakdown of the page type by the number of hits to your site.
Page Type | Hits | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Files | 18134 | 8.52% |
Images | 86714 | 40.73% |
Pages | 74278 | 34.89% |
Misc. Web | 33791 | 15.87% |
This report shows a breakdown of the page type by the amount of bandwith used by each type.
Page Type | Bandwidth | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Files | 679.85 megabytes | 29.49% |
Images | 881.41 megabytes | 38.24% |
Pages | 590.95 megabytes | 25.64% |
Misc. Web | 153.01 megabytes | 6.64% |
Most Popular Resource analysis shows most frequently occuring requests broken down by type, but also includes summary information across all types and directories.
This report displays the most requested resources on your web site. Resources include Pages, Files, Images and Misc. Web items served on your website.
This report shows the most requested pages on your web site. Pages are defined in the file extenstions section under Global Options.
This report shows the most requested files on your web site. 'Files' are defined as accesses that are not Graphics, Pages or Misc. Web, such as an application with the extension .exe. Tip: Incomplete Requests are requests that were canceled in the middle of a transfer (i.e. the user got tired of waiting for the file to download and clicked the Stop button in their browser). If you have a large number of incomplete requests for a file, it's a good idea to try to reduce the size of that file or check your web server's performance.
Fast Stats
Planning should be your first step in developing a framework for an orderly greenhouse build-out. Start with a facilities master plan that looks at topography and drainage, the building locations, parking for customers and staff, access for vehicles and equipment, and utilities (including water supply and electricity).
Facilities Layout
1. Because materials handling is one of the largest costs in a greenhouse operation, major consideration should be given to placement of a new greenhouse and its relation to the headhouse. A headhouse is the key nerve center that houses the work area, office, germination and growth rooms, utility area, processing, shipping and storage. Typically, a headhouse makes up 10 percent to 20 percent of the total greenhouse space.
2. The selection of a plant-moving system is important in relation to the plants grown, distance moved and elevation differences. Conveyors, carts and pallet trays have advantages and disadvantages that you should evaluate.
3. A master plan can also help in obtaining zoning, wetlands and building permits. You should submit the master plan with the initial phase of any multiphase build-out or expansion. This then becomes part of the approval process. If commission membership and sentiments change, the expansion phases are already on file.
4. Expansion space should be planned for all areas. It is best to create the plan on paper so that several alternatives can be evaluated. Greenhouses are large, modular erector sets, and expansion is easy if planned in advance. Fuel supply, electricity, water service and headhouse layout should be sized with expansion in mind.
Greenhouse Style
5. A free-standing greenhouse can have a quonset (hoop), Gothic or gable roof shape. Gothic designs are the most popular as they provide higher light transmission and shed snow more easily. A-frame design is standard when glass will be used for glazing. The free-standing design is usually the best choice for the small grower planning on less than 10,000 square feet of growing space. It is easy to build additional greenhouses as more space is needed. A separate growing environment can be provided in each house. Individual greenhouses can also be shut down when not in use. Free-standing greenhouses are generally less expensive to build, as site preparation and erection costs are less.
6. Growing space greater than 10,000 square feet is best provided by a gutter-connected greenhouse. Individual bays vary in width from 12 feet to 30 feet and have a clearance of 12 feet to 20 feet at the gutter. Bays can be constructed to achieve the desired width. The greenhouse can also be built in modular sections when more growing area is needed. Lengths up to 300 feet are available. A gutter-connected greenhouse offers the greatest flexibility. A taller gutter height is better as it provides an air buffer and room for an energy truss and energy/shade screen. Heat can be centralized, and heating costs are as much as 25 percent less than an equal area in free-standing greenhouses. Utilities are centralized and easier to install.
7. Glass glazing will give the highest light transmission (about 90 percent), but has the greatest heat loss. When the greenhouse is fitted with one or two energy screens, the heat loss is about the same as double-poly (two layers of 6 mil film plastic separated by air from a small blower) or twin-wall polycarbonate (a rigid material that has ribs between two layers of rigid plastic). Taxes on a greenhouse covered with low-cost, four-year poly are generally less than one with more permanent material. A glazing that diffuses the light will provide more uniform coverage and deeper penetration into the plant canopy.
Space Utilization
8. A peninsula-style bench arrangement will allow for more growing space than the traditional long benches. It also allows separation of individual plant varieties. The main aisle down the center of the greenhouse or bay should be wide enough to allow two carts to pass (usually 5 feet to 6 feet wide, but may be up to 10 feet wide in a gutter-connected greenhouse). Perpendicular side aisles can be 18 inches to 24 inches wide.
9. Movable benches can increase usable growing space to as much as 90 percent of your total greenhouse space. These can be set up near the floor to give maximum plant height area or at 30 inches above the floor to give convenient working height. One 20-inch to 24-inch work aisle is all that is needed.
10. To save valuable greenhouse growing space, mother plants and early vegetative growth can be done in separate rooms in the headhouse. Good temperature, humidity and lighting control can provide the ideal environment.
Heating
11. With energy being one of the largest cost items in production, installing high-efficiency heating is extremely important.
12. Compare heating fuels on a cost per million-BTU (British thermal unit) basis. Natural gas is usually the least expensive, but can cost more when the demand charge for the summer months is added in. Some growers have found that installing propane heaters to handle peak demand will lower total heating cost.
13. A hot water boiler is the best choice for a heating system. Water temperature can be modulated to meet the needs of air or root-zone systems at different times of the year. Distribution can be low-cost, water-to-air unit heaters or fin pipe radiation. Hot air unit heaters and furnaces work well for greenhouses that may be closed for winter.
14. Heating the bottom of pots, the floor or under the benches can provide uniform root-zone temperature, allowing air temperature to be lower. This saves fuel. A natural gas- or propane-fired domestic hot-water heater or an instantaneous in-line water heater works well for small greenhouses. Distribution can be performed with cross-linked polyethylene (PEX) or ethylene propylene diene monomer rubber (EPDM) tubing, or low-output fin radiation under the benches. It is best to limit this type of heat to no more than 25 BTU/sq. ft., as excessive drying of the growing mix can occur otherwise. Water temperature should not exceed 110°F. In cold climates, air heat provides the difference.
Energy/Shade Screens
15. A reduction of up to 50 percent in fuel costs can be achieved with the installation of an energy/shade screen. This movable screen is closed at night to retain heat. During the summer, it provides shade to lower plant-leaf temperature and save electricity from less fan operation. A 40-percent to 60-percent shade with 50-percent energy savings is a common material used for cannabis production.
Cooling
16. A fan and louver system will provide the most positive ventilation. Although more expensive to operate than a natural ventilation system, it will provide better temperature control. The system should be designed to give a ventilation rate of about 2 cubic feet per minute (cfm)/sq. ft. of floor area during the winter and 8 cfm/sq. ft. during the summer. Several stages of ventilation capacity with multiple fans are best. Select the largest diameter fans with the smallest motors to get the lowest electricity consumption (cfm/watt). Evaporative cooling, either fan-and-pad or fog can lower inside temperature by up to 20°F during the summer.
17. Natural ventilation through side and roof vents can be effective if sized properly. Side vents should measure between 15 percent and 25 percent of the floor area. The same applies for roof vents. If insect screening is required, a larger area is needed in side and roof vents, as screening will reduce airflow.
18. A horizontal air flow (HAF) system provides good air movement, uniform temperatures and reduces disease potential. Use 1/10 horsepower 12-inch- to 20-inch-diameter fans. Spacing depends on fan design, but fans should provide a minimum air-mass speed of 100 feet/minute for adequate air circulation.
Controls
19. If individual thermostats are used for the heating and cooling systems, select those that have a +/-1ºF differential (meaning the temperature can only swing 1 degree from the setpoint). This will give better temperature control and save energy. A better choice is to use an electronic controller that will integrate the heaters, fans, evaporative cooling system, irrigation system and supplemental lights. Many controllers also have temperature and power alarm features to warn cultivators of problems within the grow environment. Computer control is best for multiple greenhouses or several sections in a gutter-connect greenhouse.
Supplemental Lighting
20. To overcome variable weather conditions and still meet a production schedule, some supplemental lighting is usually needed. High pressure sodium (HPS) and light-emitting diode (LED) fixtures are the most efficient. As cannabis is a short-day plan—with a total daily light integral (DLI) of 30 to 40 moles of sunlight plus supplemental light that has to be accumulated within 12 hours—you may have to install 500 µmols to 600 µmols of supplemental lighting to achieve this. Have the lighting-equipment supplier design the fixture layout using its computer program to get adequate intensity and uniform coverage for your location.
Irrigation
21. Automated watering can save considerable labor. The system should be designed to provide uniform watering. Drip systems, either individual emitters for container crops or tape for crops grown in beds, are usually the best choice. (More water is wasted with overhead sprinklers as water goes between the containers and also runs off the leaves.) A large number of plants can be irrigated at one time on a small water supply due to the low flow rate. Adding one or more injectors can provide fertigation. This can be either a portable unit with integral concentrate tank or a central location in the headhouse with storage for the mixing tanks and fertilizer.
John W. Bartok, Jr. is an agricultural engineer, an emeritus extension professor at the University of Connecticut and a regular contributor to Greenhouse Management, a GIE Media Horticulture Group publication. He is an author, consultant and certified technical service provider doing greenhouse energy audits for USDA grant programs in New England.
What’s New in the FastStats Analyzer 2.75 serial key or number?
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System Requirements for FastStats Analyzer 2.75 serial key or number
- First, download the FastStats Analyzer 2.75 serial key or number
-
You can download its setup from given links: