Feature changed by: Bernhard Wiedemann (bmwiedemann) Feature #310773, revision 5 Title: differentiated cores performing optimal openSUSE-11.4: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Ralph Ulrich (ulenrich) Description: A goal to boost openSUSE as a service to the world: Deliver many optimal compiled openSUSE cores aiming to outperform any individualy (gentoo) compiled system! Discussion: #1: Ralph Ulrich (ulenrich) (2010-11-02 14:43:50) This should add a real vision in strategy discussions. We, as openSUSE, should aim a real ambitioned target: Making a standardized openSUSE general core, ready to serve for many derivate distributions and for users heading for optimum. #2: Christoph Obexer (cobexer) (2010-11-06 20:47:01) A program to set up a local osc instance and recompile any installed package + publish it to some local repository(also setup & configured for use)additionally handling updated packages would also solve this problem. This would be a argument to get me using the stable openSuSE Version instead of Factory^^ #3: Scott Couston (zczc2311) (2010-11-07 18:56:23) This is a motherhood statement if I ever I have heard one! Christopher is correct in respect to a stable version! The methodology of a new release being able to correct the current versions bugs is not valid as the bug numbers of the current version are not fixed or closed. I would go bak to testing if for one moment I believed some action was taken on bug reports - Testers, by and large offer their time freely and quietly know any bug report in YAST is a closed shop and it will never be fixed by a bug report. In testing - If I believed that my accurate bugs were going to be actioned; I would start testing again but the reality of this is Zero Any others???? + #4: Bernhard Wiedemann (bmwiedemann) (2010-11-07 20:52:14) (reply to + #3) + Scott, over the past 15 months I have spent many hours testing during my spare + time and reported some dozens of bugs, in YaST and other software + delivered with openSUSE and the vast majority of those (especially all + major, easily reproducible bugs) have been addressed. + As example you could take bug 650966 from last week. + + Also remember one of the strengths of opensource software: there is + always the source so that you could (find someone to) fix it. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310773