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Date:      Thu, 27 Jan 2000 21:15:26 -0500 (EST)
From:      James Howard <howardjp@wam.umd.edu>
To:        "James A. Mutter" <jmutter@ds.net>
Cc:        freebsd-advocacy@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Another advocacy opportunity
Message-ID:  <Pine.GSO.4.21.0001272100330.7261-100000@rac9.wam.umd.edu>
In-Reply-To: <3890C38E.F15286CD@ds.net>

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On Thu, 27 Jan 2000, James A. Mutter wrote:

> > FreeBSD is developed by a group of over 150 volunteers who work on
> > an ongoing basis to ensure its reliability and stability. Two separate
> > versions are developed simultaneously. The first, called FreeBSD-STABLE,
> > is slowly moving, but more stable and reliable than the second. The
> > second, called FreeBSD-CURRENT, is less stable and more prone to problems
> > than -STABLE. -CURRENT also includes the latest drivers and features,
> > but with less testing. All changes made to -CURRENT migrate to -STABLE
> > after significant testing. With over 100 updates, additions, and bug
> > fixes made to the two branches each day, several easy and simple means
> > of keeping a FreeBSD installation updated have been developed, each
> > with a distinct niche. Additionally, daily snapshots of both branches
> > are released via the Internet for testing and usage, as well as regularly
> > scheduled releases.
> 
> I don't like the statement that FreeBSD-STABLE is "more stable and
> reliable than the second".  It implies that FreeBSD-Current is not
> stable and that FreeBSD-Stable is only marginally better than
> FreeBSD-Current.  I wouldn't even mention stability problems with
> -STABLE (I think that this is fair) and then I would recharacterize
> -CURRENT as a developers only release where new feature/ideas/concepts
> are properly tested before being merged into the -STABLE branch.

How does this revised version strike you:

	FreeBSD is developed by a group of over 150 volunteers who work
	on an ongoing basis to ensure its reliability and stability. Two
	separate versions are developed simultaneously. The first, called
	FreeBSD-STABLE is targetted and end users and professionals.  The
	second, FreeBSD-CURRENT, is aimed at developers and testers often
	including new ideas and features.  -CURRENT also includes the
	latest drivers and but with less testing. All changes made to
	-CURRENT migrate to -STABLE after significant testing. With over
	100 updates, additions, and bug fixes made to the two branches
	each day, several easy and simple means of keeping a FreeBSD
	installation updated have been developed, each with a distinct
	niche. Additionally, daily snapshots of both branches are
	released via the Internet for testing and usage, as well as
	regularly scheduled releases.

I onyl changed a couple sentences, but this sounds a lot better in my
opinion.  What do you think?

> > FreeBSD can meet the needs of large and industrial servers for most
> > potential users. The enormous number of available applications makes
> > it attractive as a workstation as well. The rapid and stable development
> > of FreeBSD to support new hardware, fix bugs, and improve performance
> > shows no signs of slowing down. FreeBSD should be on your to do list.
> > For more information about FreeBSD or to download it for free, point
> > your web browser to http://www.freebsd.com.
> 
> Again, just a wording issue, but I would change the first sentence to: 
> FreeBSD consistently meets the needs .. for it's users...

Good call, done.

Thank you, J



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