Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Thu, 9 Sep 2004 14:22:37 -0700
From:      David Syphers <dsyphers@u.washington.edu>
To:        eric <eric-list-freebsd-questions@catastrophe.net>
Cc:        Younes Al-Hroub <y5wars@yahoo.com>
Subject:   Re: Which Release to Download?
Message-ID:  <200409091422.37843.dsyphers@u.washington.edu>
In-Reply-To: <20040909205759.GC9666@catastrophe.net>
References:  <200409091513.i89FDuS01592@clunix.cl.msu.edu> <200409091322.15452.dsyphers@u.washington.edu> <20040909205759.GC9666@catastrophe.net>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Thursday 09 September 2004 01:57 pm, eric wrote:
> On Thu, 2004-09-09 at 13:22:15 -0700, David Syphers proclaimed...
>
> > I disagree. I think a completely new user should start with 5.x - there's
> > no reason to learn the details of how 4.x works, just to have significant
> > portions of that knowledge become obsolete in a month. I wouldn't use
> > 5.2.1 on a production machine, but it's perfectly fine for a desktop or
> > learning machine.
>
> Obsolete? You can't be serious; I don't forsee going to 5.x anytime
> in the next year or so.

Poor choice of words on my part. People are perfectly free to run FreeBSD 2.2, 
and some do. What I meant was, most new users are going to want 5.x, as 
things have advanced significantly from 4.x. For every person like you, who 
won't move to 5.x for at least a year after it's gone -stable (due to large 
numbers of local modifications, production stability concerns, or whatever), 
there's at least one person like me, who went to 5.x years ago even though 
I'm not a developer (did Cardbus support ever make it to 4.x?). I'm not 
recommending that new users go to -current (6.x), but I am saying the system 
administration skills they learn in 5.x will be useful to them much longer 
than those they would learn in 4.x.

-David

-- 
+++ Divide By Cucumber Error. Please
Reinstall Universe And Reboot. +++



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?200409091422.37843.dsyphers>