First and foremost, ever since version 8, I have personally had no problems 
with Fedora releases and the usual daily set of updates.  For my testing and 
use, Fedora is stable.  In fact, for my use, Fedora 13 as delivered is stable. 
We are more then one month away from the official release of Fedora 13.

What I would like to see perhaps, is a change in the frequency for updates, 
where a kind of rolling version is created within each one of the 6 monthly 
releases. This can be achieved by not sending out daily updates but instead, 
collecting them and sending out  weekly ones.

Currently I do a yum update check every other day, and find large numbers of 
updates.  Is there a reason why these cannot be collected and set into weekly 
updates? I suppose I could just look for updates on a weekly basis, and that 
would answer my own question. 

But if the policy was made that daily updates are reserved for emergency crash 
fixing,  severe bug fixing, or due to malware or virus attack protection, these 
updates would be recognized as being priority. On the weekly schedule, we could 
download a single compressed package.  

While the weekly updates might be larger in size, but as they occur weekly, it 
might help out for producing a weekly unity (re)spin. For example, with my idea 
or weekly updates and weekly (re)spins, if I stay with F12 for a month after 
F13 is officially released, I could then download the latest unity (re)spin, 
and be up to date with most updates integrated. It is conceivable that the 
(re)spin is more bug-free then the actual QA'd production release.

So, give me weekly updates and weekly re(spins).   



------------------

Regards  
 Leslie
 Mr. Leslie Satenstein

 
 
  
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