Also, on a different note, a Web page now exists that details most of the major changes from stock 3.5.11 to Trinity 3.5.11. The address is http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/wiki/bin/view/Documentation/Releases_3_5...
Looks nice!
Some thoughts:
Image sizes might be too large for folks on slower connections. I have a nominal broadband connection and some of the images took several seconds to download.
How about a note that Ark was patched to support lzma/xz? Oh wait, never mind --- that is an improvement to 3.5.12. Seems we will need a 3.5.12 page too!
What was the date of the official 3.5.11 release? I'll try to learn how to parse the svn logs since that date to create a punch list of improvements since then.
Also, on a different note, a Web page now exists that details most of the major changes from stock 3.5.11 to Trinity 3.5.11. The address is http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/wiki/bin/view/Documentation/Releases_3_5...
Looks nice!
Some thoughts:
Image sizes might be too large for folks on slower connections. I have a nominal broadband connection and some of the images took several seconds to download.
How about a note that Ark was patched to support lzma/xz? Oh wait, never mind --- that is an improvement to 3.5.12. Seems we will need a 3.5.12 page too!
What was the date of the official 3.5.11 release? I'll try to learn how to parse the svn logs since that date to create a punch list of improvements since then.
It's on the Trinity home page...just added it a few hours ago ;-)
Tim
<snip>
Looks nice!
Thanks!
Some thoughts:
Image sizes might be too large for folks on slower connections. I have a nominal broadband connection and some of the images took several seconds to download.
<snip>
That might actually be my uplink, which is nearly saturated right now. Most of the images are only ~150Kb in size; maybe going to a higher compression level would help.
Tim
That might actually be my uplink, which is nearly saturated right now. Most of the images are only ~150Kb in size; maybe going to a higher compression level would help.
I still very much remember my dial-up days and will never forget them. Hence my observation and concern. :)
My broadband connection is with a WISP (wireless ISP). Wireless sucks but no other choice in the boonies. Every RF signal in the area seems to interfere in some way or manner. Thus I tend to notice any sluggishness with image downloads. Especially after the brats and mom and pops around the county return home from the day and start sucking bandwidth all evening!