Gregory Pittman wrote: >> Jeffrey Silverman wrote: >> > ml? What is "ml"? >> > >> >> I concur. Add unresponsive and sometimes snotty ml. >> >> >> ml no doubt means mailing list. I don't think comments like this >> bother most of us. Like many FOSS projects, Scribus is a totally >> voluntary operation, top to bottom. The mailing list is full of >> people trying to get help, and help others, and since it's largely >> unmoderated, there are some not so intelligent questions, and some >> not so intelligent answers, but mostly I think we do what we can >> to answer the questions as we understand them.
I've found Scribus to be quite stable. I will admit that it is not lightning fast on my work machine (1.8 GHz Celeron with 1GB RAM, WinXP). At home, on a 2.4 GHz P4 with 1GB RAM (with both WinXP and CentOS 5) it's noticeably faster. In either case, however, it's certainly usable and no slower than some other reasonably high-end software on these oldish boxes. I'm expecting some improvement with my new (home) machine. At the risk of being accused of throwing money at a problem, this machine - Athlon 64 X2 5200, 2GB RAM, 250GB SATA drive - was $350 without monitor (which I don't need to replace). I have mostly used the 1.3.3.x series and don't have any stability issues with it. I think it's a bit unfair to criticize the stability if you are running the development version (as was done by someone a few days back). Yes, there are features lacking in 1.3.3.12 but many of them have been addressed in 1.3.5 and like everyone else, I'm looking forward to that version's stable release. There are stability issues with some builds of 1.3.5 but it's a development version and not recommended for production use. That being said, I've run 1.3.5svn from 07/17/2008 on WinXP for a couple weeks. Although it's only been with reasonably short (8 to 10 pages) documents with a dozen or so images I haven't had any crashes. Your mileage may vary, of course. As for the mailing list, I've learned a lot simply by (mostly) lurking. There are a lot of helpful people here. If you're one of them, thank you. -- Henry
