This is no secret to those who read the NEWS file of the development version
regularly, as the following has been in place since December 12th:
\section{\Rlogo CHANGES IN R-devel}{
\subsection{SIGNIFICANT USER-VISIBLE CHANGES}{
\itemize{
\item It is intended that this version will be released as \R
3.0.0.
....
However, it seems reasonable to supplement this with a more direct public
announcement.
The intended timing is to follow the annual release schedule and have R 3.0.0
around April 1 and a finalizing 2.15.3 a month earlier.
Major R releases have not previously marked great landslides in terms of new
features. Rather, they represent that the codebase has developed to a new level
of maturity. This is not going to be an exception to the rule.
Version 1.0.0 was released at a point in time when we felt that we had reached a
level of completeness and stability high enough to characterize a full
statistical system, which could be put to production use.
Version 2.0.0 came out after strong enhancements of the memory management
subsystem as well as several major features, including Sweave.
Version 3.0.0, as of this writing, contains only really major new feature: The
inclusion of long vectors (containing more than 2^31-1 elements!). More changes
are likely to make it into the final release, but the main reason for having it
as a new major release is that R over the last 8.5 years has reached a new
level: we now have 64 bit support on all platforms, support for parallel
processing, the Matrix package, and much more.
On behalf of the R Core Team,
Peter D.
Happy New Year!
--
Peter Dalgaard, Professor,
Center for Statistics, Copenhagen Business School
Solbjerg Plads 3, 2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark
Phone: (+45)38153501
Email: pd.mes at cbs.dk Priv: PDalgd at gmail.com