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GNOME 2.13.3 Development Release

Gnome 2.x
Gnome 2.x

We are rolling, rolling, rolling another release of the never ending
improvements to the GNOME desktop. Naysayers got ya down? Feeling
misunderstood? Well now is the time to step into the real world and
celebrate. The latest GNOME development release is out! Go download it.
Go compile it. Go test it. And go hack on it, document it, and translate
it.

GNOME 2.13.3 has been released. This is our third development release on
our road towards GNOME 2.14.0, which will be released in March 2006.

Changes:

http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/platform/2.13/2.13.3/NEWS

http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/desktop/2.13/2.13.3/NEWS

http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/bindings/2.13/2.13.3/NEWS

To compile it, you can use the jhbuild modulesets available at:
http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/teams/releng/2.13.3/

bindings 2.13.3 statistics:
tar.gz: 19M total
tar.bz2: 12M total

desktop 2.13.3 statistics:
tar.gz: 156M total
tar.bz2: 112M total

platform 2.13.3 statistics:
tar.gz: 49M total
tar.bz2: 34M total

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.
GNOME uses odd minor version numbers to indicate development status.

For more informations about 2.13, the full schedule, the official module
lists and the proposed modules list, please see our new shiny 2.13 page
on the wiki:
http://live.gnome.org/TwoPointThirteen

Not quite

That wasn't edge resistance; it was edge-snapping--the two aren't quite the same. Also, edge-snapping used to be horribly busted (would snap with even a single pixel of movement, would snap in the wrong or both directions, and would snap to hidden edges). It never ceased to amaze me that people actually liked edge-snapping despite how buggy it was.