>>>> 2013/10/25 00:08 +0000, Rick James >>>>
There's an old saying, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."

Why _might_ 5.6.x or 5.7.x be "better for you"?  Sure there might be some 
features you might want, might be some performance improvements that you might 
notice, etc.  And there might be some regressions that will bite you.  
Fortunately, regressions are rare.

You should probably upgrade to 5.6 soon, simply to avoid having to do a double 
upgrade when you eventually go to 5.7. 
<<<<<<<<
Everyone wants the computer where the database is changed to a newer: good time 
for installing a newer MySQL, too. In 5.6 there is a feature of interest to me: 
DATETIME (I wish it were DATE) also allows DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP and ON 
UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP; and in 5.7 a bug that I reported, relevant to my 
code, was amended.

Now, in the announcement, it is called "public milestone release of MySQL 5.7": 
what is that, and how different from "generally available"?


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