
Originally Posted by
TemplarGR
You don't seem to understand what a rolling release model is. It is obvious you have never used a rolling release distro like Arch...
It seems there are many myths widely spread in the Linux world. One such myth is that the latest software is unstable, while it is not. Alpha and beta versions of upstream software are indeed unstable at times, but when something is released as a stable version it is stable, period. Minus minor bugs that most of the time existed in previous versions too...
People seem to think that Debian for example is more stable as a system than Arch, while it is not in any way... In fact, when a distro uses 2 year old software, it lacks many features and bug/security fixes upstream has worked on... You cannot depend on distro maintainers to look at the source of every package and backport all the fixes... It is insane, and leads to many troubles...
Stability also depends on what is changed. Sure, using a brand new kernel, Xorg or Mesa version might lead to new bugs, but using the latest Firefox/Libreoffice/Transmission etc doesn't affect total system stability at all.
So there won't be a works-most-of-the-time-beta as you said. There will be a works-like-the-latest-LTS-plus-it-has-newer-end-user-software... And this is something most desktop Ubuntu users would certainly welcome...