Not even trying
by
barzok
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
I remember in years past, you had to really look closely at a/. story on April 1 because the fake stories were so well-woven. This year, they aren't even trying and even worse, they're posting dupes!
Re:Once again, a joke....
by
Tet
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
I'd be surprised if Enlightenment ever hits.20.
This is something that pisses me off about many
free software projects these days -- artificially
low version numbers. It always used to be the
case that 1.0 was the first public release of
something. You'd reserve 0.x for a limited beta
program, typically only lasting a couple of months
at most to shake out any major bugs before release.
But nowadays, it seems like the vast majority of
free software is pre-1.0. You can't reasonably
claim that Enlightenment is still beta. It's
used by thousands of people around the world,
and was at 1.0 level many years ago. I.e., the
first public release of the code has long been
and gone.
I blame
Linus -- Linux spent too long at 0.99.x, when
it was actually quite usable long before then.
But it set a bad precedent.
-- "The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike." -- Delos B. McKown
...install a version 1.0 of a product release. Wait for the patches, or you might corrupt your Nirvana installs...
John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
I remember in years past, you had to really look closely at a /. story on April 1 because the fake stories were so well-woven. This year, they aren't even trying and even worse, they're posting dupes!
This is something that pisses me off about many free software projects these days -- artificially low version numbers. It always used to be the case that 1.0 was the first public release of something. You'd reserve 0.x for a limited beta program, typically only lasting a couple of months at most to shake out any major bugs before release. But nowadays, it seems like the vast majority of free software is pre-1.0. You can't reasonably claim that Enlightenment is still beta. It's used by thousands of people around the world, and was at 1.0 level many years ago. I.e., the first public release of the code has long been and gone. I blame Linus -- Linux spent too long at 0.99.x, when it was actually quite usable long before then. But it set a bad precedent.
"The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike." -- Delos B. McKown