Hi, In my opinion it depends on how big the problem you are trying to solve realy is and how complicated it will be To design a well working solution, sometimes the cure is worse than the illnes.
For Windows it seems like we have reasonable solution, how complicated will it be to do a solution for the UNIX variants that will Fit all or most users? For my own part I think i got only 2 or 3 preferense settings that I don't need to change depending on the trace at hand And having to set them again seems like a small problem compared to waiting for the first Wireshark release for another couple of weeks... Best regards Anders -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ulf Lamping Sent: den 11 juli 2006 14:00 To: Developer support list for Wireshark Subject: Re: [Wireshark-dev] Release early, release often? - What about a new release? Jacques, Olivier (OpenCall Test Infra) wrote: > I don't see that as a pre-requisite. IMHO we should keep things simple > and have only a mention in the release notes that Ethereal preferences > are not retrieved. > That's not a very user friendly point of view. "Why should I take care of the preference settings, I was able to copy things over so others can do this as well" You're showing a point of view that I hate by a lot of open source projects (especially the wiki implementations I had a look at). I personally don't want to spend my whole life with all the programs I use to tinker settings after upgrading until it's working again. It should just update and work again as before. The most successful open source projects *are* taking care of such things, and IMHO, they are often successful because of exactly these reasons ... However, a lot of open source developers seem to think that keeping things simple for the developers is more important than keeping things simple for the users. I'm personally disgusted about this point of view, even for a project biased towards "power users". Regards, ULFL P.S: BTW, that's one of the main reasons that I still use Windows: Windows developers take care of their users while UNIX developers often don't (this seems to be a pattern). However, I want to switch to Linux for other reasons I don't like of Windows (privacy, DRM, ...). _______________________________________________ Wireshark-dev mailing list [email protected] http://www.wireshark.org/mailman/listinfo/wireshark-dev _______________________________________________ Wireshark-dev mailing list [email protected] http://www.wireshark.org/mailman/listinfo/wireshark-dev
