On Thursday 20 November 2003 10:51 pm, Dre G. wrote: > Do we need to innovate at this point or get everyone developing on the > same longer more stable cycle? I think there's a problem with "feature creep" that's starting to affect Linux in general. When I built the RedHat 7.3 server I maintain, Linux and RedHat 7.3 were perfectly adequate to the task of running a text-based webserver with PHP and MySQL support. They still are. The main "features" I'm aware of in RedHat 9 are a "better" installation script and better GUI applications. Guess what? Neither are of any interest to me in supporting this server. What I need is ongoing support for the existing functions and features of this server. I don't need support for Apache 2, I don't need PHP 5. So why do I need to "upgrade" to a new version of RedHat? The only answer is simply to support RedHat's bottom line - at the expens of my own. Microsoft is constantly seeking ways to drive the demand for new operating systems - games that require better video, spreadsheets that need more data bandwidth, databases that need innovative indexing solutions, and the dreaded self-serving growth of Live Video PowerPoint Presentations. Dancing spam on the web, and live streaming feeds of Brittany Spears. While I'm glad to see Linux moving ahead and bringing out drivers to support current hardware, I don't see a need for a decent Linux package to become WindowsMEXPOffice2005 with all the trimmings. Let's keep a solid, stable core with a broad span of hardware support, and add all the extras on separately.