Dear all, There is one fact that I find very true in this article (which in general takes an unnecessary polemic tone).
Some users, I guess some developpers and contributors, and at least myself, find it very demotivating to think that a new release means that nothing will happen anymore in Debian stable in the next 24 months. Since there is a consensus to say that upgrading the whole system every six month is a heavy overhead, I think that there is no other choice than innovating or dissapearing. Innovative directions are for instance backports.org, volatile.debian.net, or custom Debian distributions. I propose another idea: having a major.minor release scheme in which we guarantee the upgrade path from major.x to major+1.0, and from one minor release to the other. One big obstacle common to all these directions is to find a security strategy which would not drain all the workforce of the Project. But definitely I agree with the main message: if the fruit of our efforts is available one year before in Xandros, Linspire, Ubuntu, Knoppix, Mepis, Quantian, ... that in Debian, who will care when Lenny will be released ? -- Charles Plessy http://charles.plessy.org Wako, Saitama, Japan Feel free to CC me I am not subscribed -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]