Quote: Gustavo Giampaoli wrote on Tue, 05 October 2010 16:01 > > In fact, what you need to define is what's the "core" system. > > Then you could see "core system" will be updated every X month. > Example: you decide to update core system every 12 month. > > So, "core system 2011" will last 12 month. But during those 12 month > you provide constantly updates / upgrades for all the rest of the > software that isn't part to "core". > > And of course, for "core system 2011" updates / bug fix / security > patches / etc. > > During those 12 month, you can work in "core system 2012". > > Here, the "rolling" part is the "non-core" software that is constantly > updated. > > This way "core system" becomes more stable every day during the whole > year. But without getting older because in every moment you have the > latest GIMP or Thunderbird available.
This is very similar to what I just suggested so I perfectly agree with you.
