On 03.10.12 19:02, Larry Hastings wrote:
But my suspicion is that most people who
try the alphas are doing early integration testing with their own
stuff.  For those people, the earlier the alpha, the less interesting it
probably is to them. Earlier means that the software will be less
finished.  It will be buggier, it won't have as many features as the
beta will.  As a result it won't be as revealing--or as relevant--as a
later alpha or even a beta.  If that's their perspective, I suspect
they'll be less likely to try an earlier alpha.

I wholeheartedly agree with Larry. Personally I looked for the first time near Python 3.3 after release of the first alpha (before a lot of years followed the development from a distance), but if alpha came out much earlier and would be less mature, I would have probably ignored it. Of course, this is only my personal case, I can't speak for other people.


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