I received this email on May 11:
# name,organisation,country,email,comment
ReScene Feedback,,,ten.rrssrs.enoyreverofsitsopsihtenon|diassa#ten.rrssrs.enoyreverofsitsopsihtenon|diassa,"I Have python 34 installed so ReScene works with XP.
Two PC Python is not on a PC connected to the internet. How to get the source so can be built or used with Python 34.
At the very top of the Downloads page is a link: Download repository. Go to https://bitbucket.org/Gfy/pyrescene/downloads/ and click the link there because it can get outdated.
A year between builds is a lifetime. And it is nearly a year already since last release.
Depends on all the issues that were fixed. It takes some time for me to figure it out each time too. Run from source if you want the latest and greatest.
It would be helpful if you could allow us to download the source from Bitbucket as an archive. That we can feed to Python (show us how) so we can keep up to date.
It's provided by Bitbucket. Have a look at http://rescene.wikidot.com/pyrescene-installation but it includes more than you need.
Or better make more often releases such as at least once a month or sooner for major bugs found.
I won't include email since this is the same for anyone that doesn't want to mess there internet pc with source code stuff and terminals whatever to get source code.
If Bitbucket was Github there wouldn't be an issue since can download from Github source in an archive.
I think Bitbucket is user friendlier.
Hope this helps you understand that not everyone uses ReScene as you would. So able to help us keep up to date with you. After all how can code survive if people are not using the latest build so able to report problems they have noticed so making this code better for all.
The reason for everyone is the reason I don't include email here because this feedback is for everyone not just me alone.
A simple GUI for internet pc woud help to get all files related to any release on srrdb. Input release name and it downloads to folder we have set in the GUI options. This will save time having not to visit srrdb, searching each release we need and downloading individually each file for the release."
You only need to download the .srr fiie. Files will be extracted upon reconstruction or when you do srr.exe -x file.srr to extract them.
My priorities are the historical aspects first: the collection of meta data, the core components. Others have written tools, so check out http://rescene.wikidot.com/downloads