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− | I ran across an interesting analogy on Questions today that may work its way into this article:
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− | Jerry McAllister wrote:
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− | Yah, stable is better than alpha or the bleeding edge current
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− | development image, but still in need of significant care.
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− | Think of how they report someone's health condition after a trauma.
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− | Stable seems to mean they can finally move the patient from the
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− | operating room to a bed with monitors and walk down and get lunch.
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− | But, the patient is still a long way from being able to drive home.
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− | Just so, a FreeBSD version spends a long time in stable before
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− | making it to RELEASE.
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− | I'm not sure I like refering to FBSD as a trauma patient... but the analogy certainly makes the "STABLE IS NOT THE MOST STABLE RELEASE" memorable.
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− | I may also want to explicitly mention that stable as a development release is in contrast to Debian, which is likely one of the mental stumbling blocks for many people with this concept.
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| --[[User:Joe|Joe]] 11:58, 4 Jan 2006 (EST) | | --[[User:Joe|Joe]] 11:58, 4 Jan 2006 (EST) |