On Sun, Nov 4, 2012 at 9:07 PM, Jiri Eischmann <jeisc...@redhat.com> wrote:

>
> This is a very valid argument. I understand this is a devel list, so we
> should stay on the technical level, but if we discuss such broad changes
> that affect the whole project, we should also take into account other
> aspects.
>
> Switching to rolling release would have a *huge* negative impact on
> marketing! It's releases what makes the fuzz and their announcements get
> beyond our current user base. We would have no release parties, no
> codenames. We would lose the product. I wonder what impact it would have on
> Fedora adoption by cloud providers. I think it's much more understandable
> not only for them, but also for their customers to take Fedora 17 than some
> monthly build.
>
>
Does anyone have any reliable statistics about the number of users who feel
that release parties and codenames are important to them?

There will no doubt be some people for whom the idea of running a
particular codenamed release is important - but there will also be others
for whom a high quality established linux distribution that is reliable and
up to date irrespective of its codename is more important. Marketing
feedback if it is possible to give the relative number of users in each
camp would be helpful here? Gathering such statistics is likely difficult
though.


> I personally don't like the whole idea of switching to rolling release.
> Although I see some pros, I see a lot of cons that would outweight the
> pros. I've come across a few rolling release distributions (Debian Testing,
> Arch Linux, Gentoo,...) and I don't think they work if you want to achieve
> some level of stability and predictability.


Arch linux is stable and reliable and predictable - I use it every day -
you need to ask users of the other distributions named whether users feel
they are similarly stable and predictable or not for the most part.

Does anyone have any relative user stats on the various distros?

Do any web sites gather stats which might indicate hit rates coming from
different distros?

These data are difficult to get so in the end a clear goal for any
distribution has to be agreed on and then executed - if Fedora wishes to go
to rolling Rawhide but a bit more stable that at present and it is possible
to do that - then developers must agree at least on some kind of overall
vote maybe?  In the end the users will guide whether the route taken is
being adopted widespread among the community.  You get some idea of users
interested from feedback to the devel list, or via bodhi I guess?

One other question that is hard to answer is whether a particular change in
direction is achievable since it depends on developers adopting it and
agreeing to work on it - inevitably some will not want to go to any new
route - but will the new direction excite other developers to come on board
that were not there before and make up any loss?

The way I see it is that the two routes are a bit like asking if people
like meat or fish for the main course at a meal - there will be a split
opinion - and there are good points about both!  Some people may be
allergic to one or other though!

Is there an objective list of pros and cons that can be judged without bias
in favour of rolling release or periodic releases so that a logical
weighing of the relative merits of both approaches can be considered? If
that goes in favour of rolling release then can it be achieved with the
tools available without too much effort? If new tools have to be built
within the Fedora Framework is there enough effort and willingness to build
them?

-- 
mike c
-- 
devel mailing list
devel@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel

Reply via email to