Hi
In my opinion, this has nothing to do with the release schedule. It has
mainly two reasons:
- QGIS is quite a large project. So testing really everything (including
complex interaction of different modules with GUI) is impossible.
- There is a lot of development activity in QGIS. More development =
more possibility of unexpected side effects.
A longer feature freeze wouldn't help. The thing which does help is the
2.8 version.
Regards,
Marco
Am 30.06.2015 um 20:14 schrieb Tom Chadwin:
This post is in no way a criticism of any of the QGIS team and their
monumental efforts or their fabulous product. However, I thought someone
should question how successful the four-monthly release schedule is. 2.8
immediately needed 2.8.1, and there seems to be the chance that 2.10 is
immediately going to need 2.10.1.
Is the predestined release schedule meaning that the devs simply cannot test
as much as they need? Alternatively, should the feature freeze be extended?
Anyway, keep up the fabulous work, all of you. My organization has never
looked back since migrating to QGIS, and it is only getting better and
better.
Thanks
Tom
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