Call Me Dave

Call Me Dave

Article from Issue 175/2015

A new version of a Linux system used to come with lots of new features – new tools, new capabilities. Of course, the great Linux distros are still evolving, but they don't throw a lot of new stuff in with every version like they used to. The websites often promise "bug fixes" and "enhancements" of things that are already inside.

Dear Linux Pro Reader,

A new version of a Linux system used to come with lots of new features – new tools, new capabilities. Of course, the great Linux distros are still evolving, but they don't throw a lot of new stuff in with every version like they used to. The websites often promise "bug fixes" and "enhancements" of things that are already inside.

Has Linux slowed down? Maybe, but another factor is that many developers are changing their definition of what they consider a new release. What is a release anyway? We're so used to the system that we rarely stop to reflect on the idea that, at some periodic interval, a brass band plays a fanfare to announce that some developers are putting out a new version of something they were already doing.

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