All releases of Dropline GNOME


Release Notes: This release was updated to GNOME 2.16.1, which includes many new features, bugfixes, and improvements.


Release Notes: The package was updated to GNOME 2.14.2. This release includes numerous bugfixes and translation enhancements.


Release Notes: Updated to GNOME 2.14.1, which includes many new features, bugfixes, and improvements.


Release Notes: This release is an incremental improvement, with many bugfixes and refinements over 2.12.0.


Release Notes: This release sees updates to virtually every package, and is the first release built specifically for Slackware 10.2.


Release Notes: This release adds Evolution 1.4 and required libraries. It has been updated to the latest stable releases of Mozilla, the GIMP, Gnumeric, GTK+, GStreamer, GnomeMeeting, OpenLDAP, and the core GNOME libraries. The Dropline Installer has been updated to fix the infamous "Building Category List->Main Menu" bug.


Release Notes: This version updates to the latest GNOME 2.2 series software and rebuilds every package with i686 optimizations, overhauls the Dropline Installer to support categories and localizations, and includes tons of small fixes that have accumulated over the past 2 months.


Release Notes: Many base packages have been compiled with Pentium optimizations, include Mozilla, XFree86, GTK+, and Nautilus. The core GNOME components have been upgraded to the recent GNOME 2.2.1 release. CUPS printing and ALSA sound are both supported by the entire GNOME package set.


Release Notes: The big changes in this release are the new naming scheme allowing for compatibility with Slackware 9-beta, Vector Linux, CollegeLinux, and Yoper, the addition of XFree86 4.3, and a new Dropline Update Alert applet to keeps users notified of new software. The rest of the GNOME packages have also been upgraded to their latest versions, and a drop-shadow patch was applied to GTK+ allowing for cool shadows on the menus.


Release Notes: GNOME was updated to the official 2.2.0 release, along with many of the smaller components. PAM was added, along with a user mode to give non-root users increased privileges at an administrator's discretion.