Generally Red Hat update full numbers when binary compatibility breaks 
the new glibc and threads have broken alot of stuff hence i believe that
they have done the correct thing by jumping numbers.  

Dennis

On Tue, 2003-03-25 at 08:44, Marie-Th�r�se Lorentzen wrote:
> I'm no expert in the area, however, my understanding of upgrades is that the
> general convention for at hop from on number to another would be a 'major'
> change in a kernal/a new look/ or something that separates it from the
> previous number/numners. If the hop is several numbers, then this would
> indicate an even greater change. A "dot" change/update/upgrade is generally
> for less significant changes. And as for the use of upgrade/update please
> excuse my ignorance - I do actually have a hard time knowing when something
> is an 'update' (up2date) and when something is an upgrade. I'm guessing that
> the latter involves greater changes. Maybe even from one number to another.
> 
> I'm personally thinking that if the next version is jumping from 8.0 to 9.0,
> then there are perhaps some major changes? Having said that, I can't help
> but wonder what major changes have been made.
> 
> If it's not an idication of a major change, well then if rules can be
> broken, I suppose that conventions can also be broken. It makes things more
> confusing, but in this particular case, it's not something I would worry too
> much about.

<snip>

> 
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Dennis Gilmore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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