Am Mittwoch, 16. Jan 2019, 14:34:53 schrieb Jan Engelhardt:
On Wednesday 2019-01-16 14:16, Rainer Hantsch wrote:
Am Mittwoch, 16. Jan 2019, 13:51:18 schrieb Michael Pujos:
On 16/01/2019 13:45, Liam Proven wrote:
If you are running leading-edge hardware, and for it you need a leading-edge kernel etc., then openSUSE already has an answer: it is Tumbleweed.
This is indeed very important and even more so for recent laptops that do really benefit from newer kernels and drivers.
I already answered to Liam Proven...
For PRODUCTION SYSTEMS I cannot use anything permanently changing. Also, I have to fully agree with Carlos.
Sure you can, you just do not want to. Needless to say, even production systems change state regularly, though generally fewer items per iteration.
I tried several times Tumbleweed (every time when I had troubles with Leap). I can only say, it was not better. I primarily felt being closer to bleeding edge only.
And MINT is for sure not "bleeding edge", so why can they do what openSUSE can not?
Because MINT, like Tumbleweed, is not a distribution for production systems —— for some value of "production".
Exactly. Therefore I use -> LEAP. And this LEAP can sometimes not install, or does not boot anymore after updating the kernel, or .... All I said is: MINT and other distros are able to solve this issue, and therefore it is time that LEAP also has this issue solved. But instead I get the impression that it is much more important to get out a new version than fixing the old one first.
It's not about (in)ability to (not) do something, it was a choice by each party on how much "production-readyness" (to re-use a well-known buzzword bingo term) they want to deliver in a product.
Ouch, this really hurts. You do not want to tell me that openSuSE degraded in quality, no? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org