The old "trick" won't work anymore because it is unnecessary since
0.96.4. Older versions wouldn't even start if they were too old. As of
0.96.4 you can use outdated versions for all eternity to your own and
everyone else's disadvantage again. It will however not bootstrap - that
is contact peer caches when its own cache is empty - any longer. Many or
most of these peer caches have become defunct anyway since the last
release as usual anyways.

If you don't remove your ~/.gtk-gnutella directory, it should be able to 
connect to the network just fine as usual. You should never remove your 
~/.gtk-gnutella directory, especially not because of an update.
You can also always manually connect to other peers and therefore the network.

Regarding, "It also now says the client is firewalled". This is just the
default assumption. As long as there are no incoming connections, gtk-
gnutella has to assume it is "firewalled". gtk-gnutella has absolutely
no knowledge whether you actually have any firewall activated. Thus,
switching your firewall on and off won't be noticed by gtk-gnutella at
all. The only thing that matters is whether there are incoming
connections or not.

Now that doesn't mean you shouldn't update. You really should. However,
old versions are neither banned nor defunct. After all a it just sits
there like a web browser before you enter any URL. The only difference
is that users seemingly expect it to connect on its own.

-- 
gtk-gnutella cannot connect to newer network - ancient version detected
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/248055
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