I don't think I'm the only person who's VERY VERY annoyed by Check Point's obscurely hyper-confusing naming convention for its products' version!
I barely understood that the letter "T" stands for "take", HF for Hot Fix and B for build. But when we need to compare versions, how are we supposed to read?
Is T better than HF? How about the number behind them? Suppose I have Tmmm, HFnnn and Bppp, should I just compare the mmm, nnn and ppp?
Why can't you make it simple and just use a single digit-and-dot string to represent versions? For instance, 80.20.123.456 is later than 80.20.123.333!
And the final question is: is there a TABLE showing the correspondence between the 9-digit build number and the version and/or build number?
To add insult to injury, I have right now the setup of SmartConsole for "R80.20_EA_T395". When I look at the "Help > About", the build number turns out to be 992000006 !!! So, there's totally no relationship between the 3-digit number after T and the "build number".
PS: Thanks for the mess in version numbering.