Neil Conway writes: > Peter Eisentraut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > The time from release 7.3 to release 7.4 was 355 days, an all-time > > high. We really need to shorten that. > > Why is that?
First, if you develop something today, the first time users would realistically get a hand at it would be January 2005. Do you want that? Don't you want people to use your code? We fix problems, but people must wait a year for the fix? Second, the longer a release cycle, the more problems amass. People just forget what they were doing in the beginning, no one is around to fix the problems introduced earlier, no one remembers anything when it comes time to write release notes. The longer you develop, the more parallel efforts are underway, and it becomes impossible to synchronize them to a release date. People are not encouraged to provide small, well-thought-out, modular improvements. Instead, they break everything open and worry about it later. At the end, it's always a rush to close these holes. Altogether, it's a loss for both developers and users. -- Peter Eisentraut [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]