Mozilla Calls on User Community Today for Testing
lisah writes "As Mozilla prepares to release updates for its calendar applications Sunbird and Lightning, project developers are calling on the user community to participate in the final stages of testing. The Mozilla Calendar Team has proclaimed today as Test Case Writing Day and users worldwide are encouraged to participate. Mozilla developer Clint Talbert tells NewsForge that today's event is a pre-cursor to the Calendar Test Day Mozilla will hold later this month prior to the final release of version 0.3."
Use and more specificly write _valid_ RFC 2445 compliant (aka iCal) files. Last I checked, Sunbird kinda made up it's own almost-close format, making it's own little walled garden.
.3 in favor of their own custom format someone decided was cooler? Some of us actually use and crosslink the files from our calendar program, phpicalendar, email etc, and this was a rather fatal mistake by the Mozillians that made it useless.
And didn't they ditch iCal support in
Good thing every other mail/calendaring program on the planet now supports the format, correctly usually, and stores things in it. I'm afraid in this case the open source solution is light years behind Apple (no surprise) and even Microsoft (they arent even trying).
- Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
IMHO the ship has passed and everyone who was interested in a calendaring solution from Mozilla moved on to something else years ago because they got tired of waiting. The project has just sat for too long without gaining any traction. Vista's calendar will end up taking over for Windows users and I don't see many Ical users jumping ship. Of course *nix users have several of these programs to choose from. Business users will continue to stick with Outlook. I've been a Moz booster for many years now but I simply just can't get excited about this project.
If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
I know I don't want my users doing that for my code.
Besides, whatever happened to "Test First"?
Enjoy, Randy.
I would like to get involved with Mozilla/Firefox and in a couple of cases have earnestly tried, checking out the gigantic repository, and reading up on XPCOM and trying out samples, but the checkout/build procedure is just so teeth gnashingly horrendous, I eventually just run away screaming. Some goes for OpenOffice.
It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
As someone who's worked as a quality engineer for years, a good QA engineer gets paid something close to a good software engineer. I currently work as a software engineer, and I can honestly say that in some ways testing software is much more difficult than writing it. With the amount of money the Mozilla foundation brings in, putting aside a microscopic $50 as a prize for quality assurance is a bit of a joke. How about something a little more meaty guys?
There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
Hmm, memory leakiness yes, but I've never had instability under Linux except occasionally with excessive Flash (which is easily fixed by using one of the click-to-play extensions).
As the Americans learned so painfully in Earth's final century,free flow of information is the only safeguard against...
I think you are missing the whole point of F/OSS. The prize is buried on the website and is not the reason that people want to do this.
Information wants a fueled airplane waiting at the hangar and no one gets hurt.