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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Mandrake vs. Red Hat
- Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2002 23:19:21 -0600
- From: Matt Gushee <mgushee@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Mandrake vs. Red Hat
- References: <20020605170314.D15735@example.com> <20020605171322.F15735@example.com> <87znya9jka.fsf@example.com> <20020605183456.A16369@example.com> <1023271946.3389.6.camel@example.com> <20020605193422.G18208@example.com> <20020605194647.C16369@example.com> <3CFE4C60.8010205@example.com> <20020605192737.GB28855@example.com> <87g00180ze.fsf@example.com>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.3.27i
On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 01:50:13PM +0900, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote: > >>>>> "Matt" == Matt Gushee <mgushee@example.com> writes: > > Matt> The others, as I recall, were that Debian seems to take much > Matt> more care to ensure that the software actually works before > Matt> calling it ready to release, > > I don't think this is true, unless by "release" you mean "include in > the obsolete and of-historical-interest-only distros, testing and > stable respectively". If you unslant that statement a bit, yes, that's what I mean. "Obsolete?" Jeezus. If you ask me, stuff that works is not obsolete. My dad still uses WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS. Well, he's a Professor Emeritus, so he doesn't need to produce glossy 4-color reports. But the point is, what's all the bloody rush to fix what probably isn't broken? The pernicious idea of "obsolescence" used to emanate most strongly from places like Detroit and Redmond. Now it seems to have taken over the free software world too. <scowl/> One of the reasons I started using Linux in the first place was that it held the promise of being able to upgrade my stuff when I felt the need, not when XYZ Corporation decided it was time to raid my wallet again. Well, so much for that idea (except, of course, for the wallet part). > But the means that "ready to release" is often > a synonym for "no longer usable" for a personal workstation. Unusable for compulsive upgraders, you mean? Or if not, just what do you mean? I'm sitting here at a computer running XFree86 3.3.6. Looks like a windowing system to me ... it even has colors and stuff. But I guess it's too old, and I suppose you have a duty to turn me in to the Obsolesence Police. > Red Hat's real weakness in this regard, I suspect, is that it is > enterprise-oriented. If you can afford an enterprise-class system, > Red Hat will work for you. ;-) Your logic escapes me, maestro. Enterprise-oriented? Is that why RedHat went to glibc before it was ready for prime time? Why they put out half- assed configuration tools like XConfigurator? Why they have a long history of shipping XEmacs packages that really sucked? In-a-more-luddistic-mood-than-usually yours, Matt -- Matt Gushee Englewood, Colorado, USA mgushee@example.com http://www.havenrock.com/
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