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GNOME 2.8 Release Candidate 1 (2.7.92)

Gnome 2.x
Gnome 2.x

Release Candidate 1 marks the start of our Hard Code Freeze, on the way
towards the final GNOME 2.8 release in a couple of weeks. The final lap!
Let's just hope we're not dragged off the track at the last minute by a
strangely dressed Irishman. Even though it almost sounds like fun... At
last, without further ado, RELEASE CANDIDATE ONE!

platform: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/platform/2.7/2.7.92/NEWS
tar.gz: 45M total
tar.bz2: 31M total

desktop: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/desktop/2.7/2.7.92/NEWS
tar.gz: 146M total
tar.bz2: 103M total

bindings: http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/bindings/2.7/2.7.92/NEWS
tar.gz: 13M total
tar.bz2: 8.1M total

Notes about the new MIME system
-------------------------------

As of GNOME 2.7.4, the old MIME system was replaced with a new shared
specification found on freedesktop.org. There are a couple comments to go
along with this:

* In order the to see any applications available, they must be registered
with the MIME system. This can be done by getting the latest verion of
desktop-file-utils and running:

update-desktop-database $PREFIX/applications

jhbuild in CVS has been modified to build this, and we expect
applications to do this on install automatically in the future.

* The new user interface is modeled after the proposal at:

http://www.gnome.org/~jrb/files/mime/

The old File Types capplet has been removed in favor of a nautilus-only
interface.

WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!
--------------------------

This release is a snapshot of development code. Although it is buildable and
usable, it is primarily intended for testing and hacking purposes. Like the
Linux kernel, GNOME uses odd minor version numbers to indicate development
status. Please check the 2.7 start page for more information:

http://www.gnome.org/start/2.7/

Happy testing!

- The GNOME Release Team

GNOME 2.x, meta data index search and spatial nautilus

Well, i am very impressed by the spatial nautius concept and how it made me organize my files more efficiently. And i think the new mime handling is the right way to a more Object Oriented Desktop.

But when reading the news about that upcoming techniques like WinFS and similar in Mac OS X, i ask myself if such a system would improve (OO) file management. AFAIK there is that project called "gnome storage", but there seems to be no real progress, especially concerning that point that medusa was missing: A perfomance optimized, fast indexing system.

I would like to see it (gnome storage and a search tool which supports this) in one of the next gnome releases, just to play around with it and see if it makes life easier or not.