-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 - -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I write to this list out of a discussion held on both the Fedora Forum.org site and on the Marketing list. Before I get down to the details, I think a bit of background is in order. First of all, I'm no formal programmer nor developer, I'm merely a user (a power user, if you will) with basic C and scarse programming knowledge at best, but no formal C nor programmin in general training whatsoever. I'm an avid GNOME user and have been a Red Hat Linux user for quite some time, starting back in late 90s with Red Hat 5, and I've kept "close to home" with Fedora. What does all this has to do with the fedora-desktop list? Keep reading, please. With the update of KDE to version 3.5 for Fedora Core 4, I noticed a tendency on Red Hat/Fedora's side, which I found strange, and did (and still do) not understand: Why is KDE upgradeable and GNOME seems to always lag behind? It then it struck me like lightning: This was not the first time this question has been asked, and more importantly it as also been discussed on public forums, and I have even participated of those discussions... However, now I find myself asking the same question and for the first time the commonly given answers don't quite satisfy me, so put another way: Why isn't GNOME update-able in between Red Hat/Fedora releases? Usually the answer given was the degree of complexity of the software and the amount of packages it touches, which in itself would warrant a whole distro upgrade, where as KDE is more monolithic and as such is easier to maintain. I'm not saying that this holds true today, nor that it has even been true before. Just that these are commonly given answers to the question. So I still don't quite grasp why *exactly* is GNOME so much more complex in comparison to KDE, or why does it has so many components "broken-out" into smaller packages, which in turn seem to be exactly what holds back GNOME from inclusion of newer versions to the distribution... In this sense, it would seem as if GNOME's modularity was its Achilles' ankle, for upgrades in a current Fedora/Red Hat release, anyway. It has been no surprise that Red Hat in the past, and now Fedora's development seem tied to GNOME's development cycle (I'm not saying that this is the case, like publicly sated about Ubuntu, for example; is only coincidence). However, since the release of Red Hat Network (RHN) I don't remember (not that there has not been one) a whole GNOME update available from RHN, while I do remember various ocations for KDE and its libraries... Seems odd. What prevents that GNOME upgrades could be released as an update from RHN or via yum repositories? The lifespan of a Fedora distribution before moving to Legacy and support ceased from the traditional channles is of about 1 year, which means at least two GNOME revisions (one every 6 months on fixed dates). This, I think, is important as not only these new GNOME revisions add features (and some bugs too), but also solve some other bugs. I don't mean to start a GNOME Vs KDE flamewar or anything like that, we've already had our share of those on other channels, but to know why is this the case with GNOME and new versions not making their way into current release versions before they are moved to Legacy, that's all. Thanks in advance for any input. - -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Fedora - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFD4l/EXM+XOp70dwoRAkjiAJ94wN9Zzn4+oAXvUpYGk/X5nSHAAwCeMpIw stJ02KMqFloBR5i7avAEugQ= =TkyQ - -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Fedora - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFD4vGBXM+XOp70dwoRAp/cAJ4oYnySPQM9ow5T+HakMEKeHjucMQCfTiqM gQL00j/YmlBWQ3CRCU2Rou8= =Hklm -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Fedora-desktop-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-desktop-list