Distrowatch has an article about non-LTS support going to 9 months from 18 months currently starting with 13.04. If you want to read what Ubuntu says about this change, click here.
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Distrowatch has an article about non-LTS support going to 9 months from 18 months currently starting with 13.04. If you want to read what Ubuntu says about this change, click here.
good choice imo, what they need to do now is link more to the lts version on the homepage
Or maybe they just want to have up to date applications?Quote:
everyone except testers and those with new hardware needing bleeding edge should use LTS.
mr john From 13.04 onwards, Ubuntu will be a perpetual beta and may never become truly stable. Canonical will insist on the LTS as well as most Software Companies will develop for the LTS instead of the interm releases. You may now see new software for the LTS over the interm now. Only when the next LTS comes out will companies switch to that for full support.
Actually, it's the development (as of 13.04) that will be more like the "perpetual beta" with no need to upgrade to the next development version (ex: 13.10. 14.04, and so forth) it will automatically point to the next version....
so those (like myself) who want the latest software and other ubuntu changes, can use that as the "rolling ubuntu" (though they are not going to call it rolling...lol)...
6 month versions will be just like they are now (go final/stable on release date) with 9 months (instead of 18 months) of support...Though i think the reason for this is that they want to be able to focus more on making upgrades from one version to another, more smooth, stable and reliable...and even allow one to jump from say, ubuntu 12.04 to ubuntu 13.10...
LTS stays as it was before...2 year release schedule with long term support...
I think Shuttleworth makes it clear now LTS is aimed at users, interim releases are aimed at testers:
“Our working assumption is that the latest interim release is used by folks who will be involved, even if tangentially, in the making of Ubuntu, and LTS releases will be used by those who purely consume it,” Shuttleworth explained.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2031955/ ... -near.html
So does it mean that 12.10 will be supported for another 3 months after 13.04 expires?
Quote:
So does it mean that 12.10 will be supported for another 3 months after 13.04 expires?
Yes. 12.10 will be supported for 18 months; It will be the last non-LTS to be supported for so long.
Great! So early next year, people will be getting nice and frustrated trying to install 12.04 on hardware that hasn't even been invented yet. They'll start complaining that "Ubuntu doesn't support my wifi, graphics card or 3G dongle; how can anyone use this crap" and go storming back to Windows. Or worse - Ubuntu 12.04 won't even be able to boot on such a new computer.
Canonical needs to release new LTS images with the latest kernel, every six months otherwise the above will happen.
I didn't really see a problem with the previous model of "LTS is for businesses, interim releases are for users" and decreasing the support window to 9 months.