A big update to how DeltaT calibrates, plus AMD support and automatic updates.
New
Smarter calibration. DeltaT no longer waits out a fixed 7 day timer before it trusts the score. It now calibrates by confidence: it measures how precisely it knows your machine's normal temperature rise at each load level, session by session, and locks the baseline once that reading is statistically solid and the fresh paste has had a few days to settle. Push the machine with games or heavy work and it locks sooner. Leave it idle and it keeps learning instead of guessing on data it has never seen. The calibration meter now shows real confidence and tells you the one thing it is still waiting on, instead of creeping up on a clock.
Provisional score while it learns. Instead of a blank dial for the first week, DeltaT shows an estimated score with a confidence readout the moment there is real load to compare. You get a useful read early, clearly marked as an estimate until the baseline locks.
Automatic updates. DeltaT now checks its own GitHub releases on startup and installs newer versions quietly, then restarts into the tray. No more missing out because you grabbed an old build. You can turn it off in Settings, or check on demand with a button. This is the build that turns it on, so from here your installs keep themselves current.
AMD Ryzen support. Fixed CPU temperature reading on AMD machines, including the HP Victus and Omen laptops, which report their temperature under a different sensor name than Intel. DeltaT now reads the hottest core on both Intel and AMD, and falls back to any temperature sensor the chip exposes so an unfamiliar part still gets a reading instead of a blank.
Fairer repaste verdict. The before and after repaste comparison is now a proper significance test. A change has to be both large enough and statistically clear before DeltaT calls it Improved or Worse, so noisy baselines no longer produce false verdicts.
Install
Run DeltaT-Setup-1.1.0.exe and follow the wizard. It is a self-contained build, so no separate .NET install is needed. Your learned thermal history and settings are kept, so updating from an earlier version does not lose your baseline.