+0.2.8 (?/??/2012):
+------------------
+
+- Fixed a bug that caused rEFInd to fail to scan for drivers if the
+ filesystem driver didn't set a volume name (that is, if the relevant
+ field was set to NULL rather than even an empty string). In such
+ situations, rEFInd now reports the volume name as "Unknown".
+
+0.2.7 (4/19/2012):
+------------------
+
+- After much trial and tribulation, I've overcome a GNU-EFI limitation and
+ enabled rEFInd to load EFI drivers. This feature was present in the
+ original build of rEFIt but was removed in the versions that could
+ compile under Linux, but now it's back -- and still being compiled under
+ Linux! To use it, you should place your drivers in a convenient directory
+ on the ESP (or whatever partition you use to launch rEFInd) and add a
+ "scan_driver_dirs" entry to refind.conf to tell rEFInd where to look. (As
+ always, you should specify the driver directory relative to the root of
+ the filesystem.) Note that you can't launch drivers from another
+ filesystem; they must be on the same volume that holds rEFInd. Those who
+ compile from source code should note that implementing this feature
+ necessitated using a more recent version of the GNU-EFI library. I'm
+ currently using version 3.0p, and version 3.0i does NOT work. I don't
+ know where the change occurred, but you may need to upgrade your GNU-EFI
+ installation.
+
+- Fixed bug that caused rEFInd to show up in its own menu sometimes.
+
+- Added new refind.conf token: also_scan_dirs. When scanning volumes for
+ EFI boot loaders, rEFInd always scans the root directory and every
+ subdirectory of the /EFI directory, but it doesn't recurse into these
+ directories. The also_scan_dirs token adds more directories to the scan
+ list. It defaults to "elilo,boot", but you can set it to any directory or
+ directories you like.
+
+0.2.6 (4/14/2012):
+------------------
+
+- Added "volume" keyword to configuration file's stanza options. This
+ option changes the volume from which subsequent files (specified by
+ "loader" and "icon") are loaded. You pass "volume" the name/label of the
+ FILESYSTEM you want to use (not the GPT partition name), or a number
+ followed by a colon (e.g., "1:"). The former should reliably identify a
+ filesystem, assuming the name is unique. The latter assigns numbers based
+ on the order in which they're scanned, which may not be as reliable but
+ should work when a volume is unnamed.
+
+- Fixed bug in 0.2.5 that caused failure of Linux initial RAM disk
+ mapping on some (but not all) systems. Affected computers include at
+ least some Intel motherboards, maybe others.
+
0.2.5 (4/9/2012):
-----------------