On Mon, 27 Feb 2012 12:06:05 -0600
Russell Golden <niveusluna(a)www.niveusluna.org> wrote:
There will be new features in HTTPS Everywhere 2.0, but I'm not
sure
they are significant enough to forbid packaging for EPEL. So, I'm
asking for opinions.
The new features will include:
> - 400+ new rulesets
> - numerous improvements to make the UI more usable
> - translations into a dozen languages
> - accessibility improvements for visually impaired users
> - an option to use the Decentralized SSL Observatory
Remember that this is a browser extension for Firefox. On most
machines, it'll probably auto-update in user profiles, anyway. At
least I assume so. I don't know the typical enterprise user profile
setup.
So, the changes from the current version include changes to 'the user
experence' ? ie, UI changes? Are they minor? or Major?
Is the old version still supported for security updates?
Or are they moving to only supporting the new one?
Can the old one use the new rules? Or is it stuck with out of date
rules.
If you did move to this version, would end users have to do anything
manually?
I'd guess this is kinda a grey area for two reasons:
web browsers seem to be kind of an exception to things (10.x is coming
in a RHEL update), and things that need to update off the net/rulesets
need to update to interoperate.
kevin