-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 >>>>> "Andrew" == Andrew Lenharth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...] Andrew> It is the unstable branch, lets take advantage of it and make it unstable Andrew> to start out with. The sooner we can find problems and fix them, the Andrew> shorter our release cycles will be, and the more upto-date our main Andrew> packages will be. Two reasons why this is generally not a good idea: + I'd guess for many developers their working machine is also their development machine. So, if they can't run unstable (because it is) on their working machine, they can't run unstable, period. Which would likely cause them to have to quit... + What if the release candidate of, say, perl 5.6 is *still* a release candidate when *we* want to release? Because we'd have adapted the whole system to perl 5.6... we couldn't release until 5.6'd be stable. This would cause us to be tied to the release schedules of external projects. Which'd be a bad thing. On the other hand, Debian's already working like that *in some areas*... like, for a long time the `zsh' package was the unstable development version; it still is, but there's a zsh30 package which contains the stable release. What I mean is: we can *start* integration of unstable packages early... but we cannot tie the system to these unstable releases, we still have to build on the stable releases. All this depends on the respective maintainers ability (mostly in terms of time available) and willingness to do the work, that's about all there is to it... Bye, J - -- Jürgen A. Erhard eMail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone: (GERMANY) 0721 27326 My WebHome: http://members.tripod.com/Juergen_Erhard George Herrimann's Krazy Kat (http://www.krazy.com) "Windows NT" is an acronym for "Windows? No thanks." -- Russ McManus -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Use Mailcrypt and GnuPG <http://www.gnupg.org/> iEYEARECAAYFAjjiJoIACgkQN0B+CS56qs2KlACfUOYF3C81+kObOp1GfdFNaZPn Hm4An2l02Aq5saYObdA7FhVowdutXR8r =RNl1 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----