The new version is pretty much the same in a different layout. It has a "keysort" in it, that that won't make much of a difference. The book is rather publicity for SL software than a book. The mathematics in the book can easily be done in Excel, or you even find it on wikipedia, ready to print. The program does show percentages, but if you can't use them, they won't help. If it was that easy, you wouldn't have to pick from lists to put numbers in a wheel system that you can't modify. - Basically, if you play Canada 6/49 lotto, you get the data on the official website. You get wheels online for free on a Canadian website. You get the mathematics online. If you want a few charts like in the book, I can put such online. You can also consult the odds that are published by the lottery online or on the back of the form. An example of mathematics is, that 3 even and 3 odds happens most, so that must come out. Well, the first part is true, and the second part, I don't give about it, as 6 even are easier to play and cash in. Saying that you are better off making a good selection first. Let's say that you want all lines 4 even and 2 odd numbers, then you won't be happy using any ready wheel system. You would choose dynamical tools. Again you will have to prove yourself picking numbers first. The wheel won't make you win by miracle, it is the numbers that you are using. With filtering, every filter must be right if you aim the jackpot. Even with good filters, you mostly have too many lines. In statistics you can go far, much to far, you start to believe in lies. (...) The only magic comes out of yourself. You are the picking magician, the one that decides what to play.