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I've been really dissapointed that GOG version has such an old build

0.7393 12.16.2011 GOG vs Steam 0.12367 02.06.2013
I don't remember exactly what those new builds actually fixed, but I'm pretty sure most if not all of it was Steam compatibility and such. We have the latest build with all the fixes.

Remember just how finicky Steam can get.
Post edited February 13, 2015 by Projectsonic
LOL, they use the "zero dot" notation, but then just put some increasing number, which means 0.7393 is older than 0.12367 .
Amateurs.
Post edited February 15, 2015 by AlienMind
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AlienMind: LOL, they use the "zero dot" notation, but then just put some increasing number, which means 0.7393 is older than 0.12367 .
Amateurs.
C are to explain how that qualifies them as amateurs? Seems totally fine from my perspective, although having such high minor versions is somewhat unusual.
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AlienMind: LOL, they use the "zero dot" notation, but then just put some increasing number, which means 0.7393 is older than 0.12367 .
Amateurs.
I thought that too BUT then I read the numbers again and found out that twelve thousand is bigger than seven thousand... xD Weird how they wrote it, maybe it should have another dot after the 7 and after the 12, so it is easier, but anyway, that's how I think this numbers are supposed to be read.
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AlienMind: LOL, they use the "zero dot" notation, but then just put some increasing number, which means 0.7393 is older than 0.12367 .
Amateurs.
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jonridan: I thought that too BUT then I read the numbers again and found out that twelve thousand is bigger than seven thousand... xD Weird how they wrote it, maybe it should have another dot after the 7 and after the 12, so it is easier, but anyway, that's how I think this numbers are supposed to be read.
I never understood where these kinds of interpretations of version numbers come from. The 'things' separated by dots are just integers, nothing else. Bigger numbers mean newer versions, plain and simple.
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AlienMind: LOL, they use the "zero dot" notation, but then just put some increasing number, which means 0.7393 is older than 0.12367 .
Amateurs.
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derhamster86: C are to explain how that qualifies them as amateurs? Seems totally fine from my perspective, although having such high minor versions is somewhat unusual.
Because professionals would never write something so simple as version numbers in such a confusing way, because they would know it as a recipe for disaster. A professional would write 0.07393 and 0.12367 . Or better yet, only the build number (whichever they may be because I don't believe they had 4974 builds in that timeframe), because even the 0. notation is confusing because it assumes the people doing the builds can estimate when the hell the product is finished, because the 0. notation is essentially mappable to a progress bar, 1.0 being at the release point in time.
Well, Humble's build isnt super fresh either - Bastion-HIB-2012-06-20. Also, wasnt ever updated since initial release. Considering that Humble Store now sells only steem key - probably nobody bothers to get updates.