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CVS 1.11.3 Released


From: Derek Robert Price
Subject: CVS 1.11.3 Released
Date: Fri, 27 Dec 2002 18:19:04 -0500
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.0.1) Gecko/20020823 Netscape/7.0

CVS 1.11.3 has been released. I've posted binaries for Linux and source for all platforms. See the downloads <http://ccvs.cvshome.org/servlets/ProjectDownloadList> section of cvshome.org to download the files or the NEWS <http://ccvs.cvshome.org/source/browse/ccvs/NEWS?rev=1.110&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup> file for more information.

Unfortunately, this version still doesn't compile under Windows. It hasn't since 1.11.1p1. I've fixed several bugs introduced on Windows since 1.11.1p1, but I'm still getting a compile time error compiling with MSVC 6.0 (the CVS projects standard for Windows) under Windows XP. The error crops up as a syntax error in objidl.h while compiling src/client.c. If anyone knows how to solve that, a patch would be very welcome.

Derek

--
               *8^)

Email: address@hidden

Get CVS support at <http://ximbiot.com>!
--
"Let me tell you the most beautiful story I know.
A man was given a dog, which he loved very much.
The dog went with him everywhere,
but the man could not teach it to do anything useful.
The dog would not fetch or point,
it would not race or protect or stand watch.
Instead the dog sat near him and regarded him,
always with the same inscrutable expression.
'That's not a dog, that's a wolf,' said the man's wife.
'He alone is faithful to me,' said the man,
and his wife never discussed it with him again.
One day the man took the dog with him into his private airplane
and as they flew high over winter mountains,
the engines failed
and the airplane was torn to shreds among the trees.
The man lay bleeding,
his belly torn open by blades of sheared metal,
steam rising from his organs in the cold air,
but all he could think of was his faithful dog.
Was he alive?  Was he hurt?
Imagine his relief when the dog came padding up
and regarded him with that same steady gaze.
After an hour the dog nosed the man's gaping abdomen,
then began pulling out intestines and spleen and liver
and gnawing on them,
all the while studying the man's face.
'Thank God,' said the man.
'At least one of us will not starve.'"

        -Orson Scott Card, "Children of the Mind"





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