No objections to that. For the record some of these may have been instances where we had done a full release, realised that there was some corrigible error (in the build/release process), and then manually or otherwise did a re-release without changing the actual date of release. That is, we did the release, announced it, noticed an important error (like the non-English pages having not generated properly) and then silently fixed it without mentioning it publicly. ;-) There were also instances where stumbling blocks in the release meant that it went over midnight in the timezone where the build was happening. Not saying we shouldn't update the webpages to match the XML reality, just explaining.
(Now off strike, but working to contract.)
Many thanks,
James
--
Dr James Cummings, James.Cummings@newcastle.ac.uk
Senior Lecturer in Late-Medieval Literature and Digital Humanities
School of English, Newcastle University
________________________________
From: Tei-council