On Sat, 2009-02-07 at 23:25 -0500, Mike Chalmers wrote: > > I think you make less of a point about liking Fedora than the point you > > make in that you don't understand how it all works. > > > > Craig > > > > -- > Say what you will, which isn't true, but I have used Fedora for quite > sometime, because I like it very much. > > There must be someway for Fedora to work through updates and upgrades, > then installing a new OS? On Ubuntu (which also has a 6-month upgrade cycle BTW) you can do a "dist-upgrade" when going from one version to another. This looks like a normal upgrade except that it downloads a lot more stuff and takes longer, however it is fairly easy to use. For a long time Fedora had nothing equivalent but now there's "preupgrade", which AFAIK (I haven't tried it) is more or less the same idea, just less point-and-clicky. I'm sure we'll get there eventually ... However the point I'm trying to make is that all OSes have a version upgrade process that's more complex than simply updating some packages. Changing versions allows the developers more freedom to rip out important parts of the foundations and replace them, without worrying about the system staying up while this is taking place (a process a friend compares to repairing a car engine while the car is in motion). Given that this is a fact of life, your complaint appears to boil down to the frequency with which it happens. The only possible response, as others have said, is that if this bothers you then you're using the wrong distro. poc -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines