PhillipJones wrote:
MCBastos wrote:
Interviewed by CNN on 06/10/2011 20:12, Paul B. Gallagher told the world:
1) rapid release tends to promote sloppy work, products not ready for
prime time, and poor product reduces market share;
Actually, KaiRo argued very convincingly that the rapid release has
exactly the opposite effect:
http://home.kairo.at/blog/2011-08/why_rapid_releases_can_improve_stability
You risk developer Burnt out if have no time to rest.
Another thing that would help with extensions breaking right and left.
Is not have Max versions at all. It simply works or it breaks If it
breaks the the extensions community can devote more time to new feature
or adding fixes for changes in Mozilla code (For FF and SM) and we
shouldn't need two three versions of same extensions one for SM, for
FireFox, For ThunderBird IF a FireFox extension works it should work on
SeaMonkey as well, If a Thunderbird extension works it should
automatically work in SeaMonkey. SeaMonkey should be able to use FF and
TB extensions without change.
There is already report of major crash and burn of FF 7 and 7.01 on the
Internet. already reported in the General Forum.
See this:
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/mozilla-Firefox-7-browserwars,news-12791.html
This is but one article. Another result of Rapid release.
--
Phillip M. Jones, C.E.T. "If it's Fixed, Don't Break it"
http://www.phillipmjones.net mailto:[email protected]
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