On Tue, 2010-11-23 at 18:32 +0100, Kevin Kofler wrote:
>> Note that Fedora #-2 does not fit into this view for things
at all,
>> Fedora #-2 is meant to allow people to skip a Fedora release. But in
>> practice I think this works out badly, because a relatively new Fedora
>> release like Fedora 14 tends to still have some rough edges and get lots
>> of updates/churn (and thus possible regressions, despite our best
>> effords). This is not at a good point in its cycle to upgrade to for
>> people who like it stable (and sticking with 1 release for an entire year
>> to me sounds like liking it stable).
>
> That's a reasonable point indeed.
Uh, you just explained yourself why it's not! (People don't "like it
stable", they're just too lazy to upgrade.)
What I thought was a good point is that our professed reason for the
twelve month cycle is to allow users to 'skip a release', but that in
practice this is tricky because it requires you to upgrade very early in
the life of a new release, which historically speaking is not the most
stable point.
--
Adam Williamson
Fedora QA Community Monkey
IRC: adamw | Fedora Talk: adamwill AT fedoraproject DOT org
http://www.happyassassin.net