Hi John,
there is a thing called regression. Simply put, a minor bug fix then
re-opens a load of bugs that were in containment. This also can occur when
the devs bring together several bugs into one release. If they were to put
out one release per day / per bug. 12.10 could be expected about the
year 2020.
We use the alpha / betas as benchmarks, anything thing that makes things
worse is a regression,
I hope that explains things to you, please feel free to ask further
questions.
Regards,
Phill.
On 15 September 2012 23:40, John Kim johnkim.ubu...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello QA,
I've been attending school for a few weeks now. I will get my act together
and continue contributing.
Anyway, I see that a lot of qa testers are trying out the betas and
catching some bugs.
I understand that the daily builds are the latest, up-to-the-minute Ubuntu
distribution, but why do QA Testers flock over to the alphas/betas to go
test for them? Why do they not test the latest daily build in such droves?
Most Ubuntu developers stick to the daily builds to do their dev work on
it. To what extent is the daily build useful for the QA Tester?
Thanks, and have a good day!
--
John Kim
Ubuntu enthusiast
lookjohn.com
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