Maybe it didn't sound like i meant it to.

Camino's great and i think the team's doing an incredible job. Though  
i've switched away occasionally, i've preferreed it since early 2004.

I was just a little surprised by those few large gliches after even  
the trunk builds have typically worked well. Plus my system has been  
having troubles.

I may indeed switch to the branch build for a little while.  I wasn't  
sure how much of the latest stuff was included on the branch.

I didn't mean to sound like a whiner.  Camino's brilliant.  With  
upgrades to the built-in ad-blocking style sheet, and specific tweaks  
i learned how to make in my userContent.css file, i even have few ad  
worries these days.

Scott

On Dec 10, 2006, at 03•08℗, David Fedoruk wrote:

> hello:
>
> They "were" annoying. I suffered to....
>>
>> Pretty annoying stuff but i hate to switch to any other browser.
>> They just don't cut it.  8^/
>
> But as was pointed out by earlier, you are using nightly testing
> builds. This happens. If you hate these kind of problems, you should
> be using the **official released version** 1.03 I believe. You will
> have none of those problems with it.
>
> I regret your impatience. It isn't fair to the developers who write
> the code and put their **pr-release** work on display for people to
> debug. While your criticisms are valid, you should find more
> constructive ways of saying it.
>
> You should appreciate what it feels like to put into public view work
> you know is not finished. Its something like having an audience while
> you're getting showered and dressed to go out. The world gets to see
> you warts and all.
>
> Thank-you to the developers who have worked so hard. I've watched
> Camino grow since before Firefox or Safari even existed. bugs appear
> and one by one, they've been squashed without sacrificing any of the
> principles the project began with. I think its pretty amazing. This
> time they've taken code native to another system and made it work with
> Mac OS X so that we can say that this browser is comparable or better
> than anything else out on the market for any platform.
>
> There is no such thing as software without bugs, its as imperfect as
> its human creators. However, as this project has shown, it is possible
> to solve problems and improve software, but it comes at  a price, the
> price is debugging nightly builds.
>
>
> Cheers,
> David
>
> -- 
> David Fedoruk
> B.Mus. UBC,1986
> Certificate in Internet Systems Administration, UBC, 2003

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