> > I've not ever had Evolution > > hard-freeze that I can recall. > How much of evolution do you use though? Single POP account or > something.
All day, every day, connected to multiple IMAP servers. > Probably those of us experiencing such frequent deadlocks > are using many of evolutions features. Personally, I use several IMAP > accounts, Yep. > address books including LDAP Yep. > and several network based and local calendars. Yep (I develop groupware software after all) > > It doesn't handle network issues very gracefully, > No, it doesn't. Funny enough I just finished saying so in another bug, > so this is the third time this has been iterated in the last few hours. > > I'd prefer they write and debug code. > Well, from all appearances, neither is being done, How is that? There is ample evidence of code-writing. <http://git.gnome.org/cgit/evolution/log/> <http://git.gnome.org/cgit/evolution-data-server/log/> The commit rate of Evolution is very high; at least five different people committed to EDS in the last week. Check your facts. > > Dude, pay attention to the list. They just did a complete port off of > > Bonobo, which was a big change to the underlying architecture. Clearly > > someone is investing a lot of energy into it. > And that will close how many open bugs? It makes the code base much easier for people to work on. So lots. > Or will that allow us all to > have configurable toolbars and whatnot? I really don't know the > implications of the killing off of bonobo, but it all sounds like > eye-candy (and whatnot else new features) rather than directly working > towards a goal of the fixing of the many open bugs and making Evolution > usable again. Do you even know what Bonobo is? It is an architectural change, and required to move to GNOME 3.0, and nothing to do with eye candy. _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
