35 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			35 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| ---
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| layout:    post
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| title:     "Fast world, fast updates"
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| date:      2012-03-27 06:18:43
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| tags:      [linux]
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| permalink: /blog/2012/3/27/fast-world-fast-updates
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| published: true
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| author:
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|     name: Gergely Polonkai
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|     email: gergely@polonkai.eu
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| ---
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| 
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| We live in a fast world, that’s for sure. When I first heard about Ubuntu
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| Linux and their goals, I was happy: they gave a Debian to everyone, but in
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| different clothes. It had fresh software in it, and even they gave support of
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| a kind. It was easy to install and use, even if one had no Linux experience
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| before. So people liked it. I’ve even installed it on some of my servers
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| because of the new package versions that came more often. Thus I got an up to
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| date system. However, it had a price. After a while, security updates came
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| more and more often, and when I had a new critical update every two or three
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| days, I’ve decided to move back to Debian. Fortunately I did this at the time
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| of a new release, so I didn’t really loose any features.
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| 
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| After a few years passed, even Debian is heading this very same way. But as I
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| see, the cause is not the same. It seems that upstream software is hitting
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| these bugs, and even the Debian guys don’t have the time to check for them. At
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| the time of a GNOME version bump (yes, GNOME 3 is a really big one for the
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| UN\*X-like OSes), when hundreds of packages need to be checked, security bugs
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| show off more often. On the other hand however, Debian is releasing a new
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| security update every day (I had one on each of the last three days). This, of
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| course, is good from one point of view as we get a system that is more secure,
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| but most administrators don’t have maintenance windows this often. I can think
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| of some alternatives like Fedora, but do I really have to change? Dear fellow
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| developers, please code more carefully instead!
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