On 06/16/2010 03:47 AM, Mats wrote: > Hi, > I have tried to find information about fedoras evolution but haven't > find an answer to the following question: > How long will fedora 12 be supported with security updates? > I'm coming from ubuntu and used to the idea with LTS-versions (long time > support) but I like some of the security philospohy in fedora more. > Will fedora 12 be a more mature and stable version in the long run to > use? More tested and so on? I know that I have to do some of this > judgement by my own. > > /Mats > Fedora doesn't have LTS versions. It enjoys a symbiotic relationship with Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS for that behavior. Fedora releases occur approximately every six months, and each release is maintained with updates until one month past the release of the N+2 version of Fedora. (So, Fedora 12 will be supported until one month after the Fedora 14 release - approximately 13 months from its own release). If you want long-term support, the right place for that is Red Hat Enterprise Linux, which is based on a snapshot of Fedora development at the time of its release and sees consistent, ABI-compatible updates for seven years. So with Fedora vs. Red Hat, you get to pick between the newest technology and features (Fedora) vs. long-term stability and available paid support services (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) -- Stephen Gallagher RHCE 804006346421761 Delivering value year after year. Red Hat ranks #1 in value among software vendors. http://www.redhat.com/promo/vendor/ -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines