Hello again.
As you might have heard, also the developers of Roundcube are just human beings and thus not always creating perfect and 100% bug free work. The last 0.4.1 release fixed many bugs but also introduced a quite annoying new one. That's why the next release follows just one week later. It fixes a few important bugs, especially the "Server Error" message when expanding/collapsing folders and it also updates some previously incomplete localization files.
Please replace your 0.4.1 or even 0.4 installations with this new version. It can be downloaded from http://roundcube.net/download. We also provide a patch for those who have local modifications and don't want to replace all the files again. See https://sourceforge.net/projects/roundcubemail/files/
Thanks for using Roundcube webmail!
~Thomas _______________________________________________ List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e
On Wed, 06 Oct 2010 11:27:12 +0200, Thomas Bruederli roundcube@gmail.com wrote:
Hello again.
As you might have heard, also the developers of Roundcube are just human beings and thus not always creating perfect and 100% bug free work. The last 0.4.1 release fixed many bugs but also introduced a quite annoying new one.
That's because you put out a prerelease and called it a release!
If you called it 0.4.1-pre1, this one could now have been called 0.4.1-pre2 which can simply be relabeled as 0.4.1 if nothing goes wrong.
Projects with lots of users benefit from a prerelease process because many of the users don't pick up unnanounced base lines from the repository. So you don't get their testing and feedback until you announce something.
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e
On 2010-10-06 11:49 AM, Kaz Kylheku wrote:
On Wed, 06 Oct 2010 11:27:12 +0200, Thomas Bruederli roundcube@gmail.com wrote:
As you might have heard, also the developers of Roundcube are just human beings and thus not always creating perfect and 100% bug free work. The last 0.4.1 release fixed many bugs but also introduced a quite annoying new one.
That's because you put out a prerelease and called it a release!
If you called it 0.4.1-pre1, this one could now have been called 0.4.1-pre2 which can simply be relabeled as 0.4.1 if nothing goes wrong.
Ummm... chill?
Iirc, there were a few betas and at least one RC. The fact is, most people won't update until a package is stable, so whether you call it a beta, release candidate, or prerelease, if a software doesn't have a lot of 'testers' who will run pre-release version, bugs in released versions are inevitable.
I for one thank our roundcube overlords... :)