2.0.1 will be for both Mac and Win.
- Gordon ________________________________ From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John Kirby Sent: Tuesday, November 28, 2006 2:01 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [flexcoders] To Adobe - new release improvements?? When the 2.01 update comes out... will it be for BOTH Mac and Windows? Does anyone know if they are now on the same release train? leds usop said the following: Im not from Adobe but thanks to Matt CHotin, I have been given the oppportunity to play with the prerelease 2.01 update... They say it's not a major release but for me, the inclusion of the mx:module support/framework is one big help... think of the capability of 'breaking apart' your big apps into modular ones which the user will only have to download once on demand - all that while having the framework take care of most of the communication between the modules and the shell application or other modules. On top of that, you can still leverage on using RSL's, externs, fzip and any other file size/download time management methods adn tehcniques. And oh yeah, they have several bugs fixed already. Again thans Matt. Id' say but Numberous bugs have been fixed --- Daniel Wabyick <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:daniel%40wabysabi.com> > wrote: > Hey Adobe guys, > > Is it possible for you to address some of the major > (or non-major) > improvements in the coming Flex release? > > In particular, I am keen to know if there were > significant improvements > made to Flexbuilder itself. Stuff like increased > compiler performance, > ease of use with relative paths, etc would be of > interest to me. A > close second would be roughly the number of bugs > fixed in the actually > Flex UI framework. > > As my project continues to grow, I am definitely > getting antsy for a new > release! > > > Thanks, > -Daniel > __________________________________________________________ Cheap talk? Check out Yahoo! Messenger's low PC-to-Phone call rates. http://voice.yahoo.com <http://voice.yahoo.com> -- Whether you think that you can, or that you can't, you are usually right. - Henry Ford

