Listen to what Rajko says, he's brilliant I would like to help test, but my time is very limited. With my commute I am working 10 hours per day. My education requires about an hour per day and my wife and son require attention per day as well as eating, sleeping and regular "life". I help what I can when I can. I am getting an education so I can help more in other areas as well. The "here and now" is I NEED a stable openSUSE that boots every day, doesn't "freak out" with an update and isn't "outdated" in just a couple of months. I can't risk being without a computer for 24 hours and this is why I use openSUSE and not MS like all the people around me who have nothing better to talk about except the last virus outbreak to which I smile and walk away. On Tue, Sep 25, 2012 at 9:37 PM, Rajko <rmatov101@charter.net> wrote:
On Tue, 25 Sep 2012 12:48:46 +0200 Stephan Kulow <coolo@suse.de> wrote:
How much testing of factory (milestones) do you and Rajko do and how much do you expect to do if the next release is targetting end of next year?
I lost interest in testing.
I sporadically load iso in the VirtualBox, but even when it works fine it is not installed.
Development. It is going too fast, erratically changing quality independent of stage; alpha, beta, RC, or milestone number have no meaning.
My knowledge. It is needed to recover from disaster, but it is obsoleted by new technologies faster then I can learn. I'm in position of a new user that should not touch Factory. I have no eight hours a day for learning.
Bug reports. It takes a lot of effort and time to have it solved. For me it is faster to employ workaround and live happy, then to file bug report.
Blame game. I recall time when I wanted to test Gnome3, and it did not load correctly. Blame was sent to the VirtualBox and their graphics driver, which was correct. Blame game doesn't help. If product doesn't pass preliminary testing in virtual machine, who is going to use it on real hardware.
There will probably more if I would have time to look at, but vacation is over and day is shorter for 10 hours. openSUSE can't compete with daily trivial tasks like eating and buying a food.
-- Regards, Rajko. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, email: opensuse-project+owner@opensuse.org
-- God bless ! Scott DuBois www.ROGUEHORSE.com openSUSE -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, email: opensuse-project+owner@opensuse.org