It has been making me absolutely crazy that since I switched to Fedora 15, Gnome 3 I lost my terminal transparency due to a bug in Mutter which caused the drop shadow of windows to be opaque. The bug report was filed with redhat back on March 3rd

but the problem was with mutter not Fedora so they had to wait for a fix. On June 29th it was fixed in mutter and we have been waiting since then for the bug fix to make it into fedora.
I understand this kind of thing takes a while, but a status update would be nice. Finally, I decided to try the mutter/clutter version that comes with Fedora 16 (rawhide) and it works. I cannot wait for someone to back port this to Fedora 15.
If you need terminal/windows transparency in the meantime, you can update to the fedora 16 version using fedora 15.
sudo yum install fedora-release-rawhide
sudo yum update clutter mutter --enablerepo=rawhide update
Afterwards, I got perfectly normal transparency on windows with a drop shadow.
@(e:Paul) Not sure but what would also be interesting to look into is where Bugs are in the food chain like what happens with what ever eats them? As an example I've seen an ad for some kind of milk that comes from cows feed something else as if that something else makes milk from a cow better.....
@(e:tinypliny) the art thing is interesting but you know what the next step to that would be..... It would be set it up in a way that the bugs could see both options and see what one they pick.... Would a bug pick McDonald's after the fact would it tell the other bugs to or can it tell them or show them how it acts differently .....
Fascinating: :::link:::
There is a whole face of academia working on the most esoteric of issues. I am SO boring by comparison. What the hell am I doing with my time?!
Wow, I swear its impossible to have an original idea anymore.
I saw this exhibit at CEPA where they compared two colony of ants, one fed on McDs and one fed on their native diet from the woods. The ants fed on McDs had, on an average, more number of dead bodies near their anthill than the ones that were fed on their traditional diets. :::link:::