On Monday 06 December 2010 19:00:51 Kim Leyendecker wrote:
This looks all very interesting.... But with a LTS-Release it maybe will be difficult. I used Ubuntu 10.04 LTS for a while and read something about 8.04 LTS. There´s Firefox in version 3.0.19 and there aren´t any updates by Mozilla (I read it, if it isn´t the truth, please correct me) so I think it´s the work of the community to do this.
In generell I think the idea of Thomas Thym very nice. It looks a little bit like Debian: - stable - testing - sid
Maybe the Ubuntu-way is a much better way to do it:
openSUSE 11.4 becomes a regular version. openSUSE 11.5 will be the first LTS release. Support till 2014 (when it comes 2011) openSUSE 11.6 will be a regular 6 month release so on.....
Then they are two important repos: - LTS: This repo includes all software for a LTS-release - Regular: This repp includes all 6 month releases of software.
Factory becomes like Debian Sid.
That´s my idea of a LTS-version
So you want to force people to update their entire system just to get a bleeding edge KDE, or kernel or digikam ? Sounds more like a step backward to me. -- Adrian Schroeter SUSE Linux Products GmbH email: adrian@suse.de -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org