You can find Daemon binaries on coinshield.io.
To the open source inquisition, here is my prior statement regarding its current status:
Yes the source release must be timely, and it is really of no benefit as of now, as we already supply willing exchanges with the code base for them to complete their reviews, Earlz reviewed my code before Bittrex added it:
Hello,
I've reviewed the (closed-source) code for this wallet. The source has been radically restructured which makes my traditional review format basically impossible. However, skimming over the code it appears to be of fairly good quality (except for the compiler warnings) and I've not found anything that looked exploitable or malicious. Note that because of the amount of radical changes, I can't promise anything, but I've looked it over and thought it looks good and secure with no obvious issues.
Note to 1.0.3: We are releasing this update with the incorporation of the Tech company, public disclosure of identities including pictures and business address, rebrand with public release of white paper. These pieces have to coordinate together as we lay the foundation for the new developments that have evolved with the maturing of the concepts and technology that create this economy. We are working to move into the real world as a legitimate currency not plagued with images of illegal activity and ponzi schemes, but a transparent useable currency that produces value in many industries besides Crypto.
Note to 2.0.0: My plan is to have the proper visibility by the time I get Core 0.2.0.0 built, which will include LLL integration [created by me] which will allow us a more efficient protocol, database, serialization, hashing, and code base. Also to come is complete rewrite of the Qt from scratch to solve many issues with its speed and efficiency. These productions will be coming from the Tech company, in which I hope by this time our visibility is strong enough for me to release 0.2.0.0 as open source.
Thank You,Viz.