First, I was only asking that the Beta release notes state the incompatibility issue, as a courtesy. I was not asking anyone to implement cross-version compatiblity.
Second, the release notes for Live Beta 5 did say to post such issues to the place I had originally posted to (Live Beta 5 topic). Maybe you need to change those directions.
As to the name for cross-version compatibility, call it "version neutral" compatibility, if you wish, or call it backward/forward compatibility, whatever. Live is not the only computer program to face such a challenge.
It is not unheard, in fact, it's common, for new versions of a program to be able to save in a format such that older versions of that program can still read documents in the new format. I see it all the time.
I'm a software engineer, so I've seen this issue arise with many different kinds of programs. It's pretty much up to the ingenuity of the file-format designer to have designed a flexible document structure in the beginning. If that wasn't done in the beginning, it's real pain to add it later.
It is generally a good thing for everyone, users & developers alike, to maintain compatibility within one major release, not just dot releases, unless you happen to have a document file-format that is particularly difficult to work with.
When the document format is designed with such flexibility in mind, then the new features are simply ignored by the old versions of the program.
In the word processing or image processing world, backward/forward compatibilty within a major revision is common. MS Word and Adobe Photoshop both have no problems opening documents one major version ahead.
Respectfully,
Rick B.
I think, therefore I jam...
Mac Dual G5, PowerBook G4, MOTU 828 MkII