YOU KICKED LENNY YOU BASTARD !
YOU KICKED LENNY YOU BASTARD !
Posted Oct 6, 2008 21:49 UTC (Mon) by ballombe (subscriber, #9523)In reply to: Huh? by khim
Parent article: What you can do for "Lenny"
I understand Ubuntu release codename are annoying since they change so often,
but Debian stable release codename, seriously ?
Posted Oct 6, 2008 22:05 UTC (Mon)
by khim (subscriber, #9252)
[Link] (3 responses)
It's as simple as that: you can not expect "general public" to know what the Debian developers or users know. Most LWN readers are not Debian developers. And not all are Debian users, believe it or not.. This is what the initial buchanmilne's complaint was all about...
Posted Oct 6, 2008 22:40 UTC (Mon)
by drag (guest, #31333)
[Link] (2 responses)
In a news article there it is completely, and totally, unreasonable to explain every codeword or other detail. Frankly I am suprised that anybody reading this website doesn't automatically know what Debian Lenny is.
Seriously. If you don't know your living under a rock. If your at all a Linux professional or hobbyist or anything like that and you don't know some very basic things (like this) about Debian that is a HUGE gap in your knowledge, and you should, right now, go down and do some basic research. You are missing out, big time. It's only for your own benefit.
--------------------------------
You know what happens when you type the terms 'Debian' and 'Lenny' in google and click 'I feel lucky'?
http://www.debian.org/releases/testing/
This information is NOT difficult to find out. It's not secret. In fact it's sprayed all over the place any time anybody talks about Debian for anything.
Posted Oct 7, 2008 8:14 UTC (Tue)
by niner (subscriber, #26151)
[Link] (1 responses)
Same goes for Ubuntu, where it's even worse because the user might be on any version
Code names are exactly that: code. The original intent of "code" is that _not_ everyone
Posted Oct 7, 2008 10:58 UTC (Tue)
by hppnq (guest, #14462)
[Link]
Of course, if you don't even know what "Lenny" is.
.. it would still be better to complain on this mailing list.
Uhm, they use some kind of Hungarian notation? You seem to forget that
every code needs an interpreter.
Posted Oct 7, 2008 14:05 UTC (Tue)
by buchanmilne (guest, #42315)
[Link]
Debian's post was Ok, LWN's announce of it was not
Debian's post was Ok, LWN's announce of it was not
Debian's post was Ok, LWN's announce of it was not
everywhere. I know that quite well. Yes I know debian, yes I even know that the code
names are figures in Toy Story. But every time someone on the DRBD mailing list or
anywhere else asks a question like "I installed DRBD on Lenny and have this problem", I
just stop reading, because I simply don't want to do this anymore. Debian has already a
perfect scheme: unstable, testing, stable. That's what makes sense and what gives you
at least some information about what this user is doing.
of the last years or even an older LTS. With their year-based version numbers I'd at least
immediately get an idea about how old this users's version is.
understands it and that works quite well.
Debian's post was Ok, LWN's announce of it was not
I think what the original poster is complaining about is
that this work is burdoned on him
everywhere.
But every time someone on the DRBD mailing list or
anywhere else asks a question ...
With their year-based version numbers I'd at least
immediately get an idea about how old this users's version
is.
Thank you for proving my point
This post was sent to debian-devel-announce.
But, I originally said:
I'm fine with people referring to releases by codename on mailing lists dedicated to that software project. But, using it outside the project is meaningless IMHO. That being the whole point of a code name, by definition.
Sure, that's not the subject of the mail, but the mail was sent to a Debian-specific list (thus, nothing wrong with assuming familiarity). But, LWN isn't supposed to be a distro-specific site.
I understand Ubuntu release codename are annoying since they change so often, but Debian stable release codename, seriously ?
Well, I'm actually wondering if anyone recognized the distribution codenames I used at the end of my original post:
Sorry, but that just doesn't Tikanga the Traktopel with me.
The fact that no one has commmented on that seems to indicate that people *aren't* familiar with linux distribution releases by their code name, proving my point.