Bill Nottingham wrote: > To put it a different way, a large regression for our users far outweighs > tha cost of any number (heck, even hundreds) of bugfixes having to wait > a day, or two, or even a week. > > For most bugfixes, the user doesn't notice at all. When a user gets a > bugfix on something they've hit, they think "oh, that's nice, Fedora fixed > it", but they don't really care whether it cam Monday or Friday. For every > regression they hit, they think "ARRGH, this Fedora crap. All I did is > update and now it's broken and I can't do what I want!" The impact on the > user's productivity and attitude isn't the same, and they can't be treated > the same. One thing to consider: while from a psychological standpoint, a regression is indeed perceived as much worse than an unfixed bug, from a technical / practical standpoint it's actually the smaller issue: you can rollback to the version of the package before the regression, you can't rollback an unfixed bug as there's nothing to roll back to! Kevin Kofler -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel