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Date:      Tue, 21 Mar 2000 13:38:47 +0100
From:      Brad Knowles <blk@skynet.be>
To:        David Murphy <drjolt@redbrick.dcu.ie>, stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Voxware is toast.  Get used to it.  (Re: Suggestions for improving newpcm performance?)
Message-ID:  <v04220815b4fd1c95611c@[195.238.1.121]>
In-Reply-To: <20000321121048.E49550@enigma.redbrick.dcu.ie>
References:  <200003191838.KAA40955@rah.star-gate.com> <000701bf91d5$4aebeb60$0304020a@NENYA> <001a01bf91c1$7f62a4b0$0304020a@NENYA> <200003191838.KAA40955@rah.star-gate.com> <20000319220453.A65973@ipass.net> <005d01bf9221$4660ac60$0304020a@NENYA> <20000320153429.A1373@ipass.net> <v04220803b4fcf1e15773@[195.238.1.121]> <20000321121048.E49550@enigma.redbrick.dcu.ie>

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At 12:10 PM +0000 2000/3/21, David Murphy wrote:

>  The problem is, -RELEASE is pushed out like a new release of a
>  commercial OS, with big announcements, etc. etc., so people expect it
>  to have been subject to a similar level of prerelease beta testing.

	It has gotten *way* more testing than any Microsoft x.0 release, 
but it's still not ready for prime-time.

	The difference is that Microsoft will tell you to switch 
everything over ASAP (since it "fixes" all those old bugs you've been 
having to live with), and then they'll take in *huge* amounts of 
money as you pay to upgrade all your other software, and as they get 
more licenses shipped because you have to buy all new hardware to run 
all their new bloatware that runs on their new 63,000+ bug-ridden OS.

>  Clearly this is not and cannot be the case, and IMHO therefore it
>  should not be labeled -RELEASE, but -EARLYACCESS or similar.

	This has been debated before.  The problem is that so long as it 
is called -BETA, -EARLYACCESS, or whatever, people will stay away 
from it in droves, and we'll never run across most of the problems 
that remain to be debugged.

	At some point, you *MUST* declare that this has gone on long 
enough, and that it is time to cut a -RELEASE version.  At which 
point, everybody and their brother jumps on it and stupidly tries to 
install it on all their production systems.


	I think the folks who bring you FreeBSD are being much more 
intelligent about this -- they name it -RELEASE, they encourage you 
to take a look at it on non-production hardware, but they 
*DISCOURAGE* you from running it on production hardware, because 
there haven't been enough people testing it yet.

	What is so hard to understand about that?

--
   These are my opinions -- not to be taken as official Skynet policy
======================================================================
Brad Knowles, <blk@skynet.be>                || Belgacom Skynet SA/NV
Systems Architect, Mail/News/FTP/Proxy Admin || Rue Colonel Bourg, 124
Phone/Fax: +32-2-706.13.11/12.49             || B-1140 Brussels
http://www.skynet.be                         || Belgium


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