It make a lot of sense, but looking it as "trying to not compare" I think it would be good idea to focus this in a serie of mini how-to refreshing this knowledge. Or we can just send a lot of cheat cubes to everyone asking :D Br 2018-01-10 12:25 GMT-03:00 Matthew Miller <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > On Wed, Jan 10, 2018 at 11:59:55AM +0100, Silvia Sánchez wrote: > > I think one of the differences to explain is how the updates and upgrades > > work. Ubuntu has a strict schedule compared to Debian (its mother > distro) > > and Fedora. They have LTS (Fedora doesn't) and "normal" upgrades. > > I've seen many people getting confused with this, often understanding > that > > Fedora is unstable because it has no LTS. Maybe we could explain how > > Fedora updates work and why this doesn't mean that is unstable, but just > > things have organised in a different way? > > I'm actually working on some messaging documents about LTS and rolling > releases. I think the above is a good topic, but for this article I'm > thinking more about practical tools differences rather than strutural > differences like that. Make sense? > > -- > Matthew Miller > <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Fedora Project Leader > _______________________________________________ > Fedora Magazine mailing list -- magazine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe send an email to magazine-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > -- Eduard Lucena Móvil: +56975687314 GNU/Linux User #589060 Ubuntu User #8749 Fedora Ambassador Latam _______________________________________________ Fedora Magazine mailing list -- magazine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to magazine-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx