By defining an unbreakable reference platform, are we necessarily limiting its 
ability to integrate on other platforms?  That is my underlying question.  I 
understand the need for a reference platform but am trying to understand to 
what extent that results in us not being able to easily support other platforms 
(or not).

Jim

On Feb 17, 2011, at 4:46 PM, Soren Hansen wrote:

> 2011/2/17 Jim Curry <[email protected]>:
>> Got it.  But the primary tradeoff is simply that we need to make sure any 
>> changes we make to another platforms don't break the Ubuntu integration?  
>> And in general that should not be a major issue...?
> 
> I don't think I understand the question, I'm afraid. :( From where I
> see it, there's no trade-off involved. We've decided to define a
> reference platform. Support for other platforms is very welcome
> indeed, but there's just the one "blessed" platform, where we "can't"
> break. It's the platform we test everything on.
> 
> --
> Soren Hansen
> Ubuntu Developer    http://www.ubuntu.com/
> OpenStack Developer http://www.openstack.org/



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