I downloaded that version, all purple color for laptops, and it was the biggest piece of shit i ever seen.,it ran like a virtual machine,slow. My version was an Ubuntu release.It went over like a lead balloon.Any RAMDRIVE OS like puppy linux, on a live cd, would have blown the doors off of it.I,am running Fedora 19 xfce with the latest kernel release,13 and it makes windows 8.1 Pro, look like a turtle with Arthritis.The Fedora project and Redhat need to straighten out the same old package installer issues, were any downloaded gzip or zip ect..which is not a yum package, does not auto install, like Microsoft windows,your never going to win over the masses unless this OS is an auto installer,seamless downloads which an install sheild, builds an installer,then remedies all of it like yum does.  and puts it all in   nice and neatly in the proper directories,  for every app,just like Microsoft windows OS.The learning curve is high enough, this turns away many newbies, and even many old timers,i only want to do command line apps, when i absolutely must. Every app, must have a GUI or it wont get used, by any newbies,or any one else other than the old time linux people, who do everything on the command line.People do not have time for this in today's world.Tighten up the wi-fi security, make it so tight it can drop any attempts to connect, to hot spot routers.we use these hotspot routers because they are the only device small and portable,and rechargable batteries.These kids are stealing wi-fi,service, on a massive scale.we have no idea when any intrusion occurred?. Just some ideas, thank you, Randy S. Fitzgerald.


On Tue, Apr 1, 2014 at 9:21 AM, Jiri Popelka <jpopelka@redhat.com> wrote:
It's been 2 months since 0.3.9.3 release, so I think it's time for another one.

Given that 0.3.9 wasn't quite a success - it introduced some regressions
which have been fixed with follow-up 0.3.9.x releases - I've been thinking
about how can we improve this and the first idea is doing a release-candidates (or whatever you call it).

If you're interested in testing and you use Fedora, then it's piece of cake, just
grab one of .repo files from
https://copr.fedoraproject.org/coprs/jpopelka/FirewallD/
copy it into /etc/yum.repos.d/ and run 'yum update'.
Yum will offer you to update to build of snapshot of upstream git repository.

I'll be glad for any response, thanks !

--
Jiri
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