Joshua D. Drake wrote: > Dave Page wrote: >> There is currently no way for a visitor to the website to what whats >> cool and new in the latest major release. This info is in the main >> announcement panel for a while after we release, but is gone as soon as >> we have a conference or something. > >> Any ideas how we can best fix this? > > Personally, I believe we should only talk about the "latest" release on > the front page and have "older releases" linked.
Disagree - we should be linking to the latest point releases of each supported branch. Many people just can't do a major upgrade every year. > Secondly we could add a > new features link after latest release that is a page about what is cool > and new (with a link to everything else we have too). On this point I'm talking about what's new in the branch rather than the version - the next bit is about the version details. >> Related to this, we have links on the front page to the release notes of >> the latest point releases. A suggestion was made to me that these should >> point to lists of all the changes in the given branch. Consider the >> following scenario: > >> - Critical security issue is found so we produce a release. >> - Shortly after we find a simple bug in say, plpgsql that warrants >> another release. >> - User visits the site, and only sees the details of the bug which >> doesn't affect him, thus doesn't bother to upgrade. > > Right. > >> One solution (which could also resolve an issue that I think JD raised >> recently) would be to split the Release Notes appendix in the docs into >> seperate pages for each major release, re-ordered so the next/previous >> links make more sense. On the website we'd then point people at these >> index pages, rather than the specific release. > > > I like this. :-) /D ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org