On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 2:33 PM, Cristian Rodríguez <crrodriguez@opensuse.org> wrote:
On Wed 16 Jan 2013 05:19:27 PM CLST, Jiri Slaby wrote:
No, that's definitely not how Linux is supposed to work. The first and unbreakable rule is *no regressions*. Anywhere [1]. Systemd started being a piece of shit and tries to continue in that by constantly breaking the rule and breaking non-mainstream stuff (heck, redhat guys I talked to used to be kidding about that by saying that it boots exclusively on the Lennart's laptop). Stop spreading that crap. The developers just cannot break everything and move their hands off spitting at people to fix their stuff. This is not how mature developers do coding. And yet, this is not for the first time; pm-utils removal is the last example I remember.
Don't you see how bad the design of that software is?
No, the only thing I see is old-beards complaining and whinning when things change.
I think change is great... and there's nothing wrong with it per se. However, whoever makes a change is responsible for ensuring that whatever got broken by that change gets properly fixed. That doesn't necessarily mean they have to do the actual fixing... it may just be an issue of coordinating the fixing. -Archie -- Archie L. Cobbs -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org