--On Thursday, December 21, 2006 6:35 PM +1300 Lesley Walker
<lesley.walker(a)opus.co.nz> wrote:
But it would feel equally silly if we went with the latest release
and
encountered a new bug that appeared since the "stable" release that just
happened to be triggered by something that turned out to be weird in our
environment and nobody else noticed it before. :-)
Since new point releases are regressions against the last release (i.e.,
bug fixes for bugs found since that last release, as opposed to new
features), the likely hood of this occurring is minimal. Not to say that
it isn't possible that a bug fix may introduce other issues, but that is
generally unlikely. What not running the latest release generally means
though, is that if you encounter a problem, the first response to that
issue if you ask for help is most likely going to be *upgrade* to the
latest release and then verify it occurs there. So, why not just run the
latest one? ;)
--Quanah
--
Quanah Gibson-Mount
Principal Software Developer
ITS/Shared Application Services
Stanford University
GnuPG Public Key:
http://www.stanford.edu/~quanah/pgp.html