I don't think the real problem is where to find nigthlies. Myself, i use (and probably abuse !) them on my own PC.
The problem is different on a professional environment (not only on PC but also in unix or linux environment) where the user cannot always do what he wants and especially if your working environment is controlled by a centralized staff. They have to administrate many machines (2000 in our case, but it could be more !), and because they don't want to treat all machines as a particular case they have strict rules for installing softwares. One of the first rules is that they install
only official releases, not nightlies, because on too many softwares it's the beginning of many problems, especially when you administrate a lot of machines. Even in that case, it takes quite a long time before they give us the official permission to use a new release, typically 3 to 6 months in the best case, because they want to verify (officially !) if there are not bad interactions with all the other authorized softwares. Normally, I'm not authorized too, to install other versions than the ones tested by our centralized team ! In some cases, and that's happens sometimes, you can introduce problems on other machines, not only yours. Certainly not the case with codeblocks, but as I told before, the centralized team has general rules driven by security reasons.
Of course, I'm a bad boy, and as I said before, I use nightlies because I'm convinced that, especially for codeblocks, they are good. But it's very difficult to convince our centralized team that codeblocks is an exception in the software world. It could largely help us, poor lonesome professionnal users
, if from time to time one of the nightlies could be declared as an official release. That's all.
gd_on