On Fri, 26 Feb 2010 19:18:58 +0000, Matthew wrote: > On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 08:15:43PM +0100, Till Maas wrote: > > > 1) to fix a bug or add a feature the maintainer experienced/uses > > If nobody is complaining about the bug, then fixing the bug can wait > until the next Fedora release. Brilliant strategy. =:-/ You know that the product is broken and could be repaired, but you don't fix it till somebody is hit by the breakage actually. That may work if it's just a single loyal Fedora user, who stays calm and reports the issue only to Fedora. It fails completely for all users, who find the breakage but who complain in places other than Fedora specific sites. It results in bad publicity and comparing of distributions. And it's extra bad in all the cases where "latest upstream release" really is equal to "works best", based on what the software's power-users tell. OMG, and I'm not even one who advocates the "always upgrade to latest upstream releases quickly" way. > > 2) As already told several times, not having people to test something > > does not mean that the package is not used > > If they're not complaining, they're presumably happy with the current > state of the package? My experience differs. Not limited to Fedora, one can hear it often that users "sit and wait" without reporting something themselves. And not seldomly it leads to users seeking for alternative software to do the same/similar job. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel