Really would depend on the user. Part of my company still runs on SQLServer 
2003, for instance...

Corporate infrastructure rarely sees upgrades. Your cousin with the wordpress 
fetish, on the other hand...

On Apr 30, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Ferenc Kovacs wrote:

> On Sat, Apr 30, 2011 at 7:53 PM, Rasmus Lerdorf <ras...@lerdorf.com> wrote:
> 
>> On 04/30/2011 10:36 AM, Stas Malyshev wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi!
>>> 
>>> Do you realize why we did this in the first place? The common versions
>>>> of MySQL in use out there are not very clever when it comes to the
>>>> native prepared statement handling. First, there is no prepared
>>>> statement cache, so there is no benefit to doing them natively, but
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> Since 5.1.17 there is:
>>> http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/query-cache-operation.html
>>> And 5.1.17 is 4 years old already.
>>> 
>> 
>> People upgrade their databases even slower than they upgrade their PHP.
>> 
>> -R
>> 
>> 
>> 
> with 5.0 EOL-ed for some time, and even the debian stable is running 5.1, I
> wonder how many of our user runs 5.0.
> 
> Tyrael


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