Re: [Pharo-users] [Pharo-dev] [ANN] Pharo 7.0 released!

2019-01-22 Thread Norbert Hartl
Congratulations to you all! It has been a hard piece of work which was 
postponed 9 months. But the changes to collaboration process, build process, 64 
bit maturing and huge list of things  was worth it. Hopefully the next version 
is less huge.

Happy to be able to take part!!!

Norbert

> Am 22.01.2019 um 14:36 schrieb Esteban Lorenzano :
> 
> Pharo 7.0 released!
> ===
> 
> Dear World and dynamic language lovers: 
> 
> The time has come for Pharo 7.0!
> 
> Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful 
> environment, focused on simplicity and immediate feedback.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> This is our most significant release yet. Here are the key highlights of this 
> release:
> 
>   • Pharo is now provided in 64-bit version in Linux and OSX and brings 
> even better performance and stability. The 64-bit version is now recommended 
> for Linux and Mac, and is provided as technical preview for Windows.
>   • Pharo comes with a new version of the PharoLauncher 
> (https://pharo.org/download): THE tool to manage your distributions (access 
> to regular versions, jenkins builds, and older versions). 
>   • Pharo build has a fully new build process that supports its full 
> bootstrap from sources. This will enable the production to specific (micro) 
> images. 
>   • Iceberg, the git client for Pharo has been significantly improved, 
> and is the default CMS.
>   • Calypso, the angular stone of PharoThings, is the new system Pharo 
> browser. It replaces Nautilus and brings better remote working and more 
> advanced browsing capabilities. 
>   • IoT is now an important part of Pharo. Installing PharoThings 
> (https://github.com/pharo-iot/PharoThings) provides an impressive amount of 
> tools to develop applications in small devices.
>   • The unified foreign function interface (UnifiedFFI) for interfacing 
> with the outside world is significantly improved to work properly on Windows 
> 64-bit. 
> 
> Pharo 70’s new infrastructure and process set the stage for a new generation 
> of version. 
> The visibility of GitHub combined with the powerful tools that have been 
> validated with more than one year of beta testing is massively pay off.
> 
> These are just the more prominent highlights, but the details are just as 
> important. 
> 
> We have closed a massive amount of issues: 2142 issues! (A comprehensive 
> changelog can be found at: 
> https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/blob/master/Pharo70ChangeLogs.md).
> 
> While the technical improvements are significant, still the most impressive 
> fact is that the new code that got in the main Pharo 7.0 image was 
> contributed by more than 75 people.
> 
> Pharo is more than code. It is an exciting project involving energetic 
> people. We thank all the contributors of this release:
> 
> Gabriel Omar Cotelli, Gustavo Santos, Marcus Denker, Torsten Bergmann, 
> Esteban Lorenzano, Bernardo Ezequiel Contreras, Guille Polito, Pablo Tesone, 
> Yoan Geran, Stéphane Ducasse, Cyril Ferlicot, Vincent Blondeau, Denis 
> Kudriashov, Julien Delplanque, Tim Mackinnon, Max Leske, Andrew P. Black, 
> Tomohiro Oda, Clément Béra, Ben Coman, Eric Gade, Yuriy Tymchuk, Nicolas 
> Cellier, Biyalou-Sama Asbath, Myroslava, Sean DeNigris, Juraj Kubelka, Noury 
> Bouraqadi, Holger Freyther, Geoff Reedy, Norbert Hartl, Paul DeBruicker, 
> Alain Plantec, Martín Dias, Peter Uhnak, Tomohiro Oda, Benoît Verhaeghe, 
> Santiago Bragagnolo, Wouter van Zuilen, Bernhard Pieber, Damien Pollet, Geoff 
> Hill, Hans-Martin Mosner, Ronie Salgado, Philippe Back, Aliaksei Syrel, Dayne 
> Guerra, Rafael Luque, Serge Stinckwich, Vincent Aranega, Hernán Morales 
> Durand, Petr Fischer, Rajula Vineet Reddy, Alexandre Bergel, Esteban A. 
> Maringolo, Jan Blizničenko, Johan Brichau, Luc Fabresse, Quentin Ducasse, 
> Sébastien Roccaserra, Stephan Eggermont, Sven Van Caekenberghe, Takano 
> Mitsuhiro, Pavel Krivanek, Allex Oliveira, Christophe Demarey, Lionel Akue, 
> Nicolai Hess, Martin McClure, Alistair Grant, Pierre Tsapliayev, Milton 
> Mamani, Matteo Marra, Thomas Dupriez, Asbathou Biyalou-Sama.
> (If you contributed with Pharo 7.0 development in any way and we missed your 
> name, please send us a mail and we will add you).
> 
> Enjoy!
> The Pharo Team
> 
> Try Pharo: http://pharo.org/download
> Learn Pharo: http://pharo.org/documentation
> 


[Pharo-users] Pharo 7 image does not load

2019-01-22 Thread sergio ruiz
I have been working in my image all day today, and it was working great.

This evening, when I went to fire it up, it appears to start, but I am not
seeing the image running. The icon hangs, and it does nothing.

Here is an my debug.log for just one iteration of this.

Any help would be appreciated!

https://gist.github.com/sergio101/c86396d10f6fea4923b59930ad44a2a0




peace,
sergio
photographer, journalist, visionary

Public Key: http://bit.ly/29z9fG0
#BitMessage BM-NBaswViL21xqgg9STRJjaJaUoyiNe2dV
http://www.codeandmusic.com
http://www.twitter.com/sergio_101
http://www.facebook.com/sergio101


Re: [Pharo-users] [Pharo-dev] [ANN] Pharo 7.0 released!

2019-01-22 Thread Sean P. DeNigris
Sven Van Caekenberghe-2 wrote
> Thank you, everybody, this is a massive collaborative effort, something to
> be proud of.

+100!!



-
Cheers,
Sean
--
Sent from: http://forum.world.st/Pharo-Smalltalk-Users-f1310670.html



Re: [Pharo-users] [squeak-dev] Falsehoods programmers believe about Smalltalk

2019-01-22 Thread Eliot Miranda
On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 1:13 PM Hernán Morales Durand <
hernan.mora...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> Done.
>
> I have some possible myths, but I'd like to confirm or reject:
>
> - All Smalltalk bytecode sets are stack-based VM. (?)
>

While there might be some implementations that use a register based
bytecode set I've never heard of one.  I do know of a few implementations
that don't use bytecode at all.


> - Bytecodes are always fixed-size. (?)
>

False.


> - Most of the time spent by a VM is in the instruction interpreter.
> (actually it's in the GC right?)
>

Neither.  In a JIT VM most time is spent executing Smalltalk code.  GC
overheads vary depending on workload, typically in the range 1% to 50%
(typically for specially constructed benchmarks written to stress the GC).


> - You cannot serialize objects containing blocks. (IIRC one can use
> MessageSends)
>

False.


> - Image cannot be bootstrapped. (This is possible in ST/X and now in Pharo
> I think).
>

False.


> - All Smalltalks includes UI classes. (GemStone doesn't have AFAIK).
>

False.


> - All implementations uses direct pointers, (GST?)
>

False.  VisualWorks uses indirection pointers.  Xerox Smalltalk-80
implementations used indirection.  But many modern implementations use
direct pointers.


> - All implementations uses green threads. (VAST? MT?)
>

False.  SmalltalkMT.   But still mostly true.  VAST & VW have green threads
and a threaded FFI.


> I'm sure people in this list will have a lot more myths heard from
> Conferences, Forums, Videos, Talks, etc. Like the guy who said Smalltalk
> was dead. So if you did something which could be ignored publicly, please
> don't hesitate to reply or ping me to get added as collaborator.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Hernán
>
>
>
> El dom., 20 ene. 2019 a las 22:41, Eliot Miranda ()
> escribió:
>
>> Hi Hernán,
>>
>> On Sun, Jan 20, 2019 at 2:31 PM Hernán Morales Durand <
>> hernan.mora...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi there,
>>>
>>> I just created a GitHub repo to collect myths around Smalltalk-based
>>> technologies: Pharo, Squeak, VW, VAST, Smalltalk/X, GNU/ST, etc. in the
>>> spirit of the Falsehoods lists [1-4].
>>>
>>> This is just a draft now but please feel free to add falsehoods based on
>>> your own experiences. Examples are greatly appreciated.
>>>
>>
>> You want pull requests?  If not, would you give me write permission?  I'd
>> love to add to the "Smalltalk is obsolete" section...
>>
>>
>>>
>>> https://github.com/hernanmd/falsehoods_smalltalk
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> Hernán
>>>
>>> [1]
>>> https://infiniteundo.com/post/25326999628/falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-time
>>> [2]
>>> https://chiselapp.com/user/ttmrichter/repository/gng/doc/trunk/output/falsehoods.html
>>> [3]
>>> https://github.com/googlei18n/libphonenumber/blob/master/FALSEHOODS.md
>>> [4]
>>> https://meta-package-manager.readthedocs.io/en/develop/falsehoods.html
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> _,,,^..^,,,_
>> best, Eliot
>>
>

-- 
_,,,^..^,,,_
best, Eliot


Re: [Pharo-users] Website is down

2019-01-22 Thread Esteban Maringolo
El mar., 22 ene. 2019 a las 14:03, Esteban Lorenzano
() escribió:
>
> There is a problem with INRIA servers :(
> They does not seems to support high traffic
>

They don't support high traffic nor high volume either. The download
speed was awful then, and it's even worst now.
But hey, those who pass all these obstacles to get to know and try
Pharo are more likely to continue using it. :)


> (supposing public from reddit and yc is high traffic?)

Well... with at least a 100:1 ratio of visits:upvotes the hits must be
at least two order of magnitude higher than on a regular day.
Which makes me wonder... do we have any stats of that?

These problems are "good" problems, and are the easiest to solve.


Esteban A. Maringolo



Re: [Pharo-users] Website is down

2019-01-22 Thread Esteban Lorenzano
There is a problem with INRIA servers :(
They does not seems to support high traffic (supposing public from reddit and 
yc is high traffic?)

G

Esteban


> On 22 Jan 2019, at 17:49, Esteban Maringolo  wrote:
> 
> Well... is down again. :(
> 
> Pharo 8.0 will have a PR team attending these aspects, and then... world 
> conquer. :)
> 
> Esteban A. Maringolo
> 
> 
> El mar., 22 ene. 2019 a las 13:17, Cyril Ferlicot ( >) escribió:
> On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 5:07 PM Sven Van Caekenberghe  > wrote:
> >
> > Not good right now ...
> >
> 
> Seems to be back :)
> 
> >
> >
> 
> 
> -- 
> Cyril Ferlicot
> https://ferlicot.fr 
> 



Re: [Pharo-users] Website is down

2019-01-22 Thread Esteban Maringolo
Well... is down again. :(

Pharo 8.0 will have a PR team attending these aspects, and then... world
conquer. :)

Esteban A. Maringolo


El mar., 22 ene. 2019 a las 13:17, Cyril Ferlicot ()
escribió:

> On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 5:07 PM Sven Van Caekenberghe 
> wrote:
> >
> > Not good right now ...
> >
>
> Seems to be back :)
>
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Cyril Ferlicot
> https://ferlicot.fr
>
>


Re: [Pharo-users] Website is down

2019-01-22 Thread Cyril Ferlicot
On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 5:07 PM Sven Van Caekenberghe  wrote:
>
> Not good right now ...
>

Seems to be back :)

>
>


-- 
Cyril Ferlicot
https://ferlicot.fr



Re: [Pharo-users] Website is down

2019-01-22 Thread Sven Van Caekenberghe
Not good right now ...

> On 22 Jan 2019, at 16:52, Cyril Ferlicot  wrote:
> 
> Hello,
> 
> pharo.org is currently down, which means that people wanted to check
> the release cannot.
> 
> I don't know who can fix that.
> 
> Have a nice day.
> 
> -- 
> Cyril Ferlicot
> https://ferlicot.fr
> 




Re: [Pharo-users] [Pharo-dev] [ANN] Pharo 7.0 released!

2019-01-22 Thread Sven Van Caekenberghe



> On 22 Jan 2019, at 14:39, Esteban Lorenzano  wrote:
> 
> https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18968116

Please join, this is going really well: 100+ upvotes, 60+ comments (both are 
important).
Let's keep the momentum going (this is a unique chance to get some publicity).


[Pharo-users] Website is down

2019-01-22 Thread Cyril Ferlicot
Hello,

pharo.org is currently down, which means that people wanted to check
the release cannot.

I don't know who can fix that.

Have a nice day.

-- 
Cyril Ferlicot
https://ferlicot.fr



Re: [Pharo-users] [Pharo-dev] [ANN] Pharo 7.0 released!

2019-01-22 Thread Sven Van Caekenberghe
Thank you, everybody, this is a massive collaborative effort, something to be 
proud of.

> On 22 Jan 2019, at 14:36, Esteban Lorenzano  wrote:
> 
> Pharo 7.0 released!
> ===
> 
> Dear World and dynamic language lovers: 
> 
> The time has come for Pharo 7.0!
> 
> Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful 
> environment, focused on simplicity and immediate feedback.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> This is our most significant release yet. Here are the key highlights of this 
> release:
> 
>   • Pharo is now provided in 64-bit version in Linux and OSX and brings 
> even better performance and stability. The 64-bit version is now recommended 
> for Linux and Mac, and is provided as technical preview for Windows.
>   • Pharo comes with a new version of the PharoLauncher 
> (https://pharo.org/download): THE tool to manage your distributions (access 
> to regular versions, jenkins builds, and older versions). 
>   • Pharo build has a fully new build process that supports its full 
> bootstrap from sources. This will enable the production to specific (micro) 
> images. 
>   • Iceberg, the git client for Pharo has been significantly improved, 
> and is the default CMS.
>   • Calypso, the angular stone of PharoThings, is the new system Pharo 
> browser. It replaces Nautilus and brings better remote working and more 
> advanced browsing capabilities. 
>   • IoT is now an important part of Pharo. Installing PharoThings 
> (https://github.com/pharo-iot/PharoThings) provides an impressive amount of 
> tools to develop applications in small devices.
>   • The unified foreign function interface (UnifiedFFI) for interfacing 
> with the outside world is significantly improved to work properly on Windows 
> 64-bit. 
> 
> Pharo 70’s new infrastructure and process set the stage for a new generation 
> of version. 
> The visibility of GitHub combined with the powerful tools that have been 
> validated with more than one year of beta testing is massively pay off.
> 
> These are just the more prominent highlights, but the details are just as 
> important. 
> 
> We have closed a massive amount of issues: 2142 issues! (A comprehensive 
> changelog can be found at: 
> https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/blob/master/Pharo70ChangeLogs.md).
> 
> While the technical improvements are significant, still the most impressive 
> fact is that the new code that got in the main Pharo 7.0 image was 
> contributed by more than 75 people.
> 
> Pharo is more than code. It is an exciting project involving energetic 
> people. We thank all the contributors of this release:
> 
> Gabriel Omar Cotelli, Gustavo Santos, Marcus Denker, Torsten Bergmann, 
> Esteban Lorenzano, Bernardo Ezequiel Contreras, Guille Polito, Pablo Tesone, 
> Yoan Geran, Stéphane Ducasse, Cyril Ferlicot, Vincent Blondeau, Denis 
> Kudriashov, Julien Delplanque, Tim Mackinnon, Max Leske, Andrew P. Black, 
> Tomohiro Oda, Clément Béra, Ben Coman, Eric Gade, Yuriy Tymchuk, Nicolas 
> Cellier, Biyalou-Sama Asbath, Myroslava, Sean DeNigris, Juraj Kubelka, Noury 
> Bouraqadi, Holger Freyther, Geoff Reedy, Norbert Hartl, Paul DeBruicker, 
> Alain Plantec, Martín Dias, Peter Uhnak, Tomohiro Oda, Benoît Verhaeghe, 
> Santiago Bragagnolo, Wouter van Zuilen, Bernhard Pieber, Damien Pollet, Geoff 
> Hill, Hans-Martin Mosner, Ronie Salgado, Philippe Back, Aliaksei Syrel, Dayne 
> Guerra, Rafael Luque, Serge Stinckwich, Vincent Aranega, Hernán Morales 
> Durand, Petr Fischer, Rajula Vineet Reddy, Alexandre Bergel, Esteban A. 
> Maringolo, Jan Blizničenko, Johan Brichau, Luc Fabresse, Quentin Ducasse, 
> Sébastien Roccaserra, Stephan Eggermont, Sven Van Caekenberghe, Takano 
> Mitsuhiro, Pavel Krivanek, Allex Oliveira, Christophe Demarey, Lionel Akue, 
> Nicolai Hess, Martin McClure, Alistair Grant, Pierre Tsapliayev, Milton 
> Mamani, Matteo Marra, Thomas Dupriez, Asbathou Biyalou-Sama.
> (If you contributed with Pharo 7.0 development in any way and we missed your 
> name, please send us a mail and we will add you).
> 
> Enjoy!
> The Pharo Team
> 
> Try Pharo: http://pharo.org/download
> Learn Pharo: http://pharo.org/documentation
> 




Re: [Pharo-users] [Pharo-dev] [ANN] Pharo 7.0 released!

2019-01-22 Thread Tudor Girba
Great work! Thanks everyone for all the effort!

Doru


> On Jan 22, 2019, at 2:36 PM, Esteban Lorenzano  wrote:
> 
> Pharo 7.0 released!
> ===
> 
> Dear World and dynamic language lovers: 
> 
> The time has come for Pharo 7.0!
> 
> Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful 
> environment, focused on simplicity and immediate feedback.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> This is our most significant release yet. Here are the key highlights of this 
> release:
> 
>   • Pharo is now provided in 64-bit version in Linux and OSX and brings 
> even better performance and stability. The 64-bit version is now recommended 
> for Linux and Mac, and is provided as technical preview for Windows.
>   • Pharo comes with a new version of the PharoLauncher 
> (https://pharo.org/download): THE tool to manage your distributions (access 
> to regular versions, jenkins builds, and older versions). 
>   • Pharo build has a fully new build process that supports its full 
> bootstrap from sources. This will enable the production to specific (micro) 
> images. 
>   • Iceberg, the git client for Pharo has been significantly improved, 
> and is the default CMS.
>   • Calypso, the angular stone of PharoThings, is the new system Pharo 
> browser. It replaces Nautilus and brings better remote working and more 
> advanced browsing capabilities. 
>   • IoT is now an important part of Pharo. Installing PharoThings 
> (https://github.com/pharo-iot/PharoThings) provides an impressive amount of 
> tools to develop applications in small devices.
>   • The unified foreign function interface (UnifiedFFI) for interfacing 
> with the outside world is significantly improved to work properly on Windows 
> 64-bit. 
> 
> Pharo 70’s new infrastructure and process set the stage for a new generation 
> of version. 
> The visibility of GitHub combined with the powerful tools that have been 
> validated with more than one year of beta testing is massively pay off.
> 
> These are just the more prominent highlights, but the details are just as 
> important. 
> 
> We have closed a massive amount of issues: 2142 issues! (A comprehensive 
> changelog can be found at: 
> https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/blob/master/Pharo70ChangeLogs.md).
> 
> While the technical improvements are significant, still the most impressive 
> fact is that the new code that got in the main Pharo 7.0 image was 
> contributed by more than 75 people.
> 
> Pharo is more than code. It is an exciting project involving energetic 
> people. We thank all the contributors of this release:
> 
> Gabriel Omar Cotelli, Gustavo Santos, Marcus Denker, Torsten Bergmann, 
> Esteban Lorenzano, Bernardo Ezequiel Contreras, Guille Polito, Pablo Tesone, 
> Yoan Geran, Stéphane Ducasse, Cyril Ferlicot, Vincent Blondeau, Denis 
> Kudriashov, Julien Delplanque, Tim Mackinnon, Max Leske, Andrew P. Black, 
> Tomohiro Oda, Clément Béra, Ben Coman, Eric Gade, Yuriy Tymchuk, Nicolas 
> Cellier, Biyalou-Sama Asbath, Myroslava, Sean DeNigris, Juraj Kubelka, Noury 
> Bouraqadi, Holger Freyther, Geoff Reedy, Norbert Hartl, Paul DeBruicker, 
> Alain Plantec, Martín Dias, Peter Uhnak, Tomohiro Oda, Benoît Verhaeghe, 
> Santiago Bragagnolo, Wouter van Zuilen, Bernhard Pieber, Damien Pollet, Geoff 
> Hill, Hans-Martin Mosner, Ronie Salgado, Philippe Back, Aliaksei Syrel, Dayne 
> Guerra, Rafael Luque, Serge Stinckwich, Vincent Aranega, Hernán Morales 
> Durand, Petr Fischer, Rajula Vineet Reddy, Alexandre Bergel, Esteban A. 
> Maringolo, Jan Blizničenko, Johan Brichau, Luc Fabresse, Quentin Ducasse, 
> Sébastien Roccaserra, Stephan Eggermont, Sven Van Caekenberghe, Takano 
> Mitsuhiro, Pavel Krivanek, Allex Oliveira, Christophe Demarey, Lionel Akue, 
> Nicolai Hess, Martin McClure, Alistair Grant, Pierre Tsapliayev, Milton 
> Mamani, Matteo Marra, Thomas Dupriez, Asbathou Biyalou-Sama.
> (If you contributed with Pharo 7.0 development in any way and we missed your 
> name, please send us a mail and we will add you).
> 
> Enjoy!
> The Pharo Team
> 
> Try Pharo: http://pharo.org/download
> Learn Pharo: http://pharo.org/documentation
> 

--
www.feenk.com

"What is more important: To be happy, or to make happy?"




Re: [Pharo-users] [ANN] Pharo 7.0 released!

2019-01-22 Thread Esteban Lorenzano
Upvote links: 

https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/aimwlh/pharo_70_released/ 

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18968116 


Cheers!
Esteban

> On 22 Jan 2019, at 14:36, Esteban Lorenzano  wrote:
> 
> Pharo 7.0 released!
> ===
> 
> Dear World and dynamic language lovers: 
> 
> The time has come for Pharo 7.0!
> 
> Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful 
> environment, focused on simplicity and immediate feedback.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> This is our most significant release yet. Here are the key highlights of this 
> release:
> 
>   • Pharo is now provided in 64-bit version in Linux and OSX and brings 
> even better performance and stability. The 64-bit version is now recommended 
> for Linux and Mac, and is provided as technical preview for Windows.
>   • Pharo comes with a new version of the PharoLauncher 
> (https://pharo.org/download ): THE tool to manage 
> your distributions (access to regular versions, jenkins builds, and older 
> versions). 
>   • Pharo build has a fully new build process that supports its full 
> bootstrap from sources. This will enable the production to specific (micro) 
> images. 
>   • Iceberg, the git client for Pharo has been significantly improved, 
> and is the default CMS.
>   • Calypso, the angular stone of PharoThings, is the new system Pharo 
> browser. It replaces Nautilus and brings better remote working and more 
> advanced browsing capabilities. 
>   • IoT is now an important part of Pharo. Installing PharoThings 
> (https://github.com/pharo-iot/PharoThings 
> ) provides an impressive amount of 
> tools to develop applications in small devices.
>   • The unified foreign function interface (UnifiedFFI) for interfacing 
> with the outside world is significantly improved to work properly on Windows 
> 64-bit. 
> 
> Pharo 70’s new infrastructure and process set the stage for a new generation 
> of version. 
> The visibility of GitHub combined with the powerful tools that have been 
> validated with more than one year of beta testing is massively pay off.
> 
> These are just the more prominent highlights, but the details are just as 
> important. 
> 
> We have closed a massive amount of issues: 2142 issues! (A comprehensive 
> changelog can be found at: 
> https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/blob/master/Pharo70ChangeLogs.md
>  
> ).
> 
> While the technical improvements are significant, still the most impressive 
> fact is that the new code that got in the main Pharo 7.0 image was 
> contributed by more than 75 people.
> 
> Pharo is more than code. It is an exciting project involving energetic 
> people. We thank all the contributors of this release:
> 
> Gabriel Omar Cotelli, Gustavo Santos, Marcus Denker, Torsten Bergmann, 
> Esteban Lorenzano, Bernardo Ezequiel Contreras, Guille Polito, Pablo Tesone, 
> Yoan Geran, Stéphane Ducasse, Cyril Ferlicot, Vincent Blondeau, Denis 
> Kudriashov, Julien Delplanque, Tim Mackinnon, Max Leske, Andrew P. Black, 
> Tomohiro Oda, Clément Béra, Ben Coman, Eric Gade, Yuriy Tymchuk, Nicolas 
> Cellier, Biyalou-Sama Asbath, Myroslava, Sean DeNigris, Juraj Kubelka, Noury 
> Bouraqadi, Holger Freyther, Geoff Reedy, Norbert Hartl, Paul DeBruicker, 
> Alain Plantec, Martín Dias, Peter Uhnak, Tomohiro Oda, Benoît Verhaeghe, 
> Santiago Bragagnolo, Wouter van Zuilen, Bernhard Pieber, Damien Pollet, Geoff 
> Hill, Hans-Martin Mosner, Ronie Salgado, Philippe Back, Aliaksei Syrel, Dayne 
> Guerra, Rafael Luque, Serge Stinckwich, Vincent Aranega, Hernán Morales 
> Durand, Petr Fischer, Rajula Vineet Reddy, Alexandre Bergel, Esteban A. 
> Maringolo, Jan Blizničenko, Johan Brichau, Luc Fabresse, Quentin Ducasse, 
> Sébastien Roccaserra, Stephan Eggermont, Sven Van Caekenberghe, Takano 
> Mitsuhiro, Pavel Krivanek, Allex Oliveira, Christophe Demarey, Lionel Akue, 
> Nicolai Hess, Martin McClure, Alistair Grant, Pierre Tsapliayev, Milton 
> Mamani, Matteo Marra, Thomas Dupriez, Asbathou Biyalou-Sama.
> (If you contributed with Pharo 7.0 development in any way and we missed your 
> name, please send us a mail and we will add you).
> 
> Enjoy!
> The Pharo Team
> 
> Try Pharo: http://pharo.org/download 
> Learn Pharo: http://pharo.org/documentation
>