FC5 T2

Jeff Spaleta jspaleta at gmail.com
Sun Jan 15 22:19:27 UTC 2006


On 1/15/06, Patrick <fedora at puzzled.xs4all.nl> wrote:
> I guess he got it, as usual, from one of the uhm less managed mirrors.
> Has happened almost every time now with a new (test) release. Imagine
> the discussion going back and forth soon on #fedora :)

For test releases i do not bother.... I just laugh at people for
getting themselves into trouble. There is an assumed risked with test
releases... and since the development tree unfreezes and has updates
before the test release goes out.. its not really a big deal... if a
test release slips.

For final releases... leaks are a REAL problem for the unsuspecting
userbase.. simply because zero-day updates to fix bugs are typically
not available before the official release date. This is a HUGE
problem, because the meatheads who are broadcasting the leaked isos or
torrent tickets makes absolutely no effort to communicate to other
people that those urls are unofficial and the update trees do not get
content before the official release date.

Now you take this fact together with the fact that releases ALWAYS
slip... and you ALWAYS find your self in a situation right before the
official release where you have interested, but novice, users who is
using an old release schedule date as the basis for looking for a
release. They bump into the oh-so-clever iso spawn campers in #fedora
and they are handed a leaked iso address without being told that
updates aren't available yet. This is highly inappropriate and leaves
unsuspecting users in a situations where they will be required to live
with zero-day problems for several days until the update tree is
populated on the official release date.  The people who hand out the
leaked urls in public forums are not acting in the best interest of
the userbase at-large and are just clever little punks with way too
much time on their hands.

-jef"but im not bitter"spaleta




More information about the fedora-test-list mailing list