In message <003801c277bf$9856cf00$0100a8c0@cyr>, u Uler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
Wouldn't everybody be happier if you gave them more time to think about
things? We all want 0.5 to come out, but what is the hurry?

Right now, we could decide on a date. The date can be one or two weeks
away, but it will be a fixed date. Everyone works towards that date, and
there are no surprises.

If the windows installer is not done by then, do not release it with
0.5, but at least that gives everyone some time to test the release
candidate and work everything over.

How about November 1. It's a Friday, so everyone can go out and have a
bear after the release.
^^^^
In this country, a domesticated ungulate would be a more conventional choice.
I agree about the timescale though, and we should all be asked to use the release candidate rather than/as well as the latest snapshot until then, apart from testing the windows installer.



I know it seems like a long time from now, but
that will build up the suspense, right? (That's a joke)

Whatever you decide, good luck with the 0.5.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:devl-admin@;freenetproject.org]
On Behalf Of Ian Clarke
Sent: Saturday, 19 October, 2002 16:18
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [freenet-dev] 0.5 release - Wednesday

> It is my understanding that the mozilla project does *exactly* what
> Oskar suggests (with the exception that their check-in freeze
periods
> are a *month* now).

So whenever a bug is discovered during that time, the clock is reset
to
1 month from that time? I doubt that very much.

> You also mention in another post that the windows installer is
> largely irrelevent. While I am no fan of Windows and don't run it
> myself, that is a very foolish thought process. The installation
> process is a major part of any release.

My point is that it isn't a blocker.

> Talking to people that used to use Netscape, Netscape's premature
> release of 6.0 has done more damage then good. It doesn't take
> much for people to turn away from a product. Netscape learned
> their lesson (that they had forgotten). So should Freenet learn
> from other's mistakes ... we don't have to make them all ourselves.

Firstly, Netscape 6.0 wasn't a beta, Freenet is.  The last stable
release of Netscape actually worked, unlike Freenet 0.3.

Explain why we should continue to recommend 0.3 as our stable release
when it doesn't even work any more, and current CVS is infinitely more
stable?

Is that fair to our users?

Ian.

--
Ian Clarke
ian@[freenetproject.org|locut.us|cematics.com]
Latest Project
http://cematics.com/kanzi
Personal Homepage                                    http://locut.us/


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Roger Hayter

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