On 25/01/14 06:20, Ivan Ivanov wrote:
Yes, that is all true. I can add this:
Call it politics or philosophy. Every Ubuntu related project which
pretends to be an official distribution (flavour) has to follow
the Ubuntu project concept - new release in every 6 months, LTS
release every two years, etc. Everything depends on the manpower.
Releasing new versions of Ubuntu GNOME in every 6 months will
prove the stability and productivity of our team.
6 Month releases in-line with Ubuntu Release schedule are one of the
requirements of being an officially recognized flavour.
LTS Releases are optional
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/RecognizedFlavors
Every advanced Linux user can install an old version of any Linux
distro and update kernel, software, desktop environment, etc. by
himself. And he can stay with this version as long as he wants (as
long as this distro is useful for him). But the 6-months cycle is
for all users who want to use Ubuntu: they are sure that in April
2014 there will be a download link for a stable and updated LTS
version of their favourite Ubuntu distro.
That's why every open-source project always needs new serious
contributors, testers, etc.
I hope the things will go in the right direction and in April 2014
we will be loving our Ubuntu GNOME 14.04 LTS.
-------- Оригинално писмо --------
От: Steve Ovens [email protected]
Относно: Re: Ubuntu-GNOME Digest, Vol 11, Issue 49
До: Erick Brunzell <[email protected]>
Изпратено на: Четвъртък, 2014, Януари 23 19:23:00 EET
I am with Lance,
I have a significant number of computers/vms, enough that I
maintain a local repo. The only machine that moves from LTS is
generally my laptop.
However, I wonder, aside from the DE, since we just pull from
Ubuntu Main, the core still receives the updates to be on the
level with Ubuntu Main does it not?
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