There are different definitions of "stable" at play here. Crashes are one thing, but what people mean in "unstable" here probably is about dependencies and pre-compiled binaries and scripts etc. breaking because of software version changes, or even just usage of some software changing and therefore breaking habits or documentation. KaiRo On 9/25/23 21:40, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Carlos E. R. <robin.listas@telefonica.net> [09-25-23 15:18]:
On 2023-09-25 20:07, Paul Lipps via openSUSE Factory wrote:
This would be a great opportunity to consolidate folks on Tumbleweed. If you don’t like the frequency of updates, then simply don’t update as often. No, that is not a solution. There are still many updates, that is the definition of "Tumbleweed is not stable". Closing your eyes to them does not stop them. tumbleweed is stable, ie: doesn't constantly crash when being used. it doesn't even infrequently crash, I cannot recall a "crash" in the last year or more.
nothing becomes not stable just because there are updates available. open your eyes and see the light.