Thank you but all I really did was complain :-)

Seriously, I'm in love with this editor framework, it is fantastic and
it will only get better as it matures to handle corner cases.  I can
only hope it gets the samples, documentation and demos it so rightly
deserves in the short term so that developers adopt it.  MVP has been
highly publicized already thanks to Google I/O and will be immediately
adopted.  The editor framework is even more important due to the
amount of code it eliminates especially when used in conjunction with
javax validation.


On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 12:10 AM, Ray Ryan <[email protected]> wrote:
> If you were paying careful attention, you just may have noticed that we
> shipped GWT 2.1 yesterday.
>
> http://googlewebtoolkit.blogspot.com/2010/10/announcing-final-release-of-gwt-21.html
>
> I'd like to thank the GWT Contrib community for all of your interest in and
> support with this release. It simply could not have happened without your
> participation in design discussions, your patches, and your scrutiny of
> patches.
>
> I'd particularly like to thank Thomas Broyer and Patrick Julien, who were
> very vocal pioneering adopters of all the new stuff. You found bugs, found
> design flaws, and had tremendous patience as we pulled the api rug out from
> under you again and again.
>
> Of course it's dangerous to single people out for praise, for fear making
> the many other contributors feel neglected — I hope I'm not doing that.
> Many, many thanks again to everyone.
>
> rjrjr
>
> --
> http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit-Contributors

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