To reiterate what Elliot said, the basic principle as I see it is that we endeavor for the current Fedora release always to have the newest stuff that is reasonably stable. After some fairly short interval in the 3-6 month ballpark, *something* certainly has a newer and better version that is reasonably stable. So more or less any time "rawhide has newer stuff", then it's a good reason to have a Fedora Core release before too long. If that sensation comes along, and there's something with a bleeding edge that's still too bloody, then that something can roll back to the stable version until the next FC release. It won't be too long. We don't want Fedora Core ever to spend significant periods of time where there is great new fabulosity out there, in some area or other, that we aren't representing in the latest release. -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list