http://www.gnome.org/start/2.14/ for the official release notes, and a list
of all the gooides in this new release. In particular, GNOME 2.14 focused
on performance, and they did not miss the mark. There's some new eye candy,
but most of the big things are waiting until GNOME 2.16. On the FreeBSD
side, we tried to clean up all the crashers we could. In particular, we
really improved GNOME's 64-bit support.
The good news is that this release does not bring any big shared library
version bumps, so you can almost do a simple portupgrade to get to 2.14.
There are a few minor gotchas that will be documented in UPDATING shortly.
The FreeBSD GNOME Team would like th thank the following users for their
patches, feedback, and sometimes incessant complaing about crashes (you
know who you are).
Yasuda Keisuke <kysd@po.harenet.ne.jp>
Pascal Hofstee <caelian@gmail.com>
rmgls@wanadoo.fr
tmclaugh
Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@gmail.com>
sajd on #freebsd-gnome
ade
ankon on #FreeBSD-Gnome
mux
Pascal Hofstee <caelian@gmail.com>
QuiRK on #freebsd-gnome
Vladimir Timofeev <vovkasm@gmail.com>
the lib version back to 1, but since the dependencies still linked to
libadns.so.1 even when the installed file was libadns.so.12, a new
PORTREVISION bump is not needed.
written in Perl and C. The archetypal application is website search, but it
can be put to many different uses.
Features
* Extremely fast and scalable - can handle millions of documents
* Full support for 12 Indo-European languages.
* Support for boolean operators AND, OR, and AND NOT; parenthetical
groupings, and prepended +plus and -minus
* Algorithmic selection of relevant excerpts and highlighting of search terms
within excerpts
* Highly customizable query and indexing APIs
* Phrase matching
* Stemming
* Stoplists
WWW: http://www.rectangular.com/kinosearch/
PR: ports/96115
Submitted by: Vivek Khera <vivek@khera.org>
XML::RSS::Parser is a lightweight liberal parser of RSS feeds. This parser
is "liberal" in that it does not demand compliance of a specific RSS version
and will attempt to gracefully handle tags it does not expect or understand.
The parser's only requirements is that the file is well-formed XML and
remotely resembles RSS. Roughly speaking, well formed XML with a channel
element as a direct sibling or the root tag and item elements etc.
There are a number of advantages to using this module then just using
a standard parser-tree combination. There are a number of different RSS
formats in use today. In very subtle ways these formats are not entirely
compatible from one to another. XML::RSS::Parser makes a couple assumptions
to "normalize" the parse tree into a more consistent form. For instance,
it forces channel and item into a parent-child relationship.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/XML-RSS-Parser/