El Thu, 3 Mar 2005 00:21:01 -0500,
Dave Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:

> bunch of IBM thinkpads. As it turns out there are quite a lot of these
> out there, so when I released a 2.6.10 update for Fedora, bugzilla lit
> up like a christmas tree with "Hey, where'd my sound go?" reports.
> (It was further confused by a load of other sound card problems, but
>  thats another issue).  This got so out of control, Alan asked the ALSA
> folks to take a look, and iirc Takashi figured out what had caused the
> problem, and it got fixed in the ALSA folks tree, and subsequently, in 
> 2.6.11rc.
> 
> Now, during all this time, there hadn't been any reports of this problem
> at all on Linux-kernel. Not even from Linus' tree, let alone -mm.
> Which amazes me given how widespread the problem was.

Part of that problem may be that reporting bugs to the kernel is hard for 
everybody except
kernel hackers. bugzilla.kernel.org is there but not many people look at it 
(which I
understand, using bugzilla is painfull, altough basing all your development 
strategy around
it _is_ rewarding, as happens in gnome/etc, where the release announcement 
includes a
list bugzilla numbers which point to fixed bugs or "new feature" bugs in the 
case of new
features).

That could be very well at last as important as the "release numbering". If 
there're bugs
out there and people are not reporting them, the "release numbering" you choose 
is
irrelevant since bugs are not being reported and you can't fix them. Just my 
humble
opinion.
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