Phoronix: After Many Delays, Fedora 18 Is Finally Ready To Ship
After another delay last week, the long and drawn out release of Fedora 18 will finally happen next week...
http://www.phoronix.com/vr.php?view=MTI3MTY
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Phoronix: After Many Delays, Fedora 18 Is Finally Ready To Ship
After another delay last week, the long and drawn out release of Fedora 18 will finally happen next week...
http://www.phoronix.com/vr.php?view=MTI3MTY
The latest Fedora 18 build image is indeed very robust, burn the image onto a DVD, put it into the DVD receiver upside down, reboot, and the fucker will still install.
It's a project management issue, really. Nobody would care much if they'd just said back in November that they were delaying the release by two months. But delaying it by a couple of weeks *eight times* is a bad look... a sign that nobody is taking a look at the situation and saying "two more weeks won't be enough".
i was saying this all along. proprietary vendors have delays too. 10.5 was delayed for like a year and vista was delayed for many years. the difference is that they gave the delay period ahead of time. although i have to say that everytime I see a Fedora release being delayed I laugh inside, because that thing is alpha software compared to Windows. I'm sorry but that's why truth. Any person that has any shred of self-respect would only use Debian Stable or equivalent. Anything less is basically full of bugs and is just gonna waste people's time.
^^^
After it's had time to cook for a while, it's pretty stable. I've never really had problems unless I started messing around with major packages. I'd tend to agree that it's sort of like Fedora is in a constant Beta/RC stage, though.
Luckily I abandoned the trainwreck called Fedora a year ago and happily switched to CentOS 6.3.
I don't need this f*ckload of changes every release, I don't even want to keep up with them - I want a stable system I can use for years without fearing that something might break now and then.
yeah well....
now I don't want it anymore :/
While I agree that if you want rock hard reliability Debian Stable or CentOS are better choices, I have not had too many issues using Fedora. And the fact that it offers some semblance of stability while giving me close to the most recent drivers and kernels is a big motivation to use it if you really do not want to mess about with rolling release distros like Arch.