The impact of under the hood changes does affect end users, but in an
The only users this would effect, with your comments about version numbers indicating "close" compatibility, would be brand new users who have never had to upgrade a Drupal before. It has been Drupal's policy, for as long as I've been with the project, to never worry about backwards compatibility, and every single release I've ever used has always needed new and updated modules. Thus, I don't find your argument strong, really - it merely highlights a (desired) downside we've been enforcing on our users through any point release for at least two years. -- Morbus Iff ( take your rosaries off my ovaries ) Technical: http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/au/779 Culture: http://www.disobey.com/ and http://www.gamegrene.com/ icq: 2927491 / aim: akaMorbus / yahoo: morbus_iff / jabber.org: morbus