Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 14th May 2010 22:23 UTC
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Member since:
2009-11-12
Well, we all know that *most software is seen in fedora before ubuntu, but the suggestion that Ubuntu uses or builds upon fedora is ludicrous. Ubuntu is based on Debian. Any time Mark Shuttleworth outlines the issues that need to be worked on in the next release, the developers in question use debian testing/unstable as the base for these changes. For instance: Mark wanted a better graphical boot experience. The devs looked into debian testing and grabbed plymouth. I know Redhat, and hence fedora, developed this piece of software, but if it wasn't in debian at some point, ubuntu wouldn't have used it.
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I see so many comments here about how ubuntu "steals" from fedora that I can't ignore them any longer. Red Hat (and hence fedora), are THE top suppliers of ENTERPRISE linux, and as such, have more developers working not only on existing FOSS technologies, but also coming up with new software, to suit their goals and clients. This is the nature of FOSS. Just because I use your software to make something better suited to my particular situation, which may not be YOUR priority, but which may also cause bug reports to be filed upstream (mostly by inexperienced bug filers), does not mean I'm stealing. Isn't this the entire reason we all wanted to use FOSS in the first place?
In conclusion, and as a developer who both causes problems for upstream and hears about problems downstream; RELAX!!!! If you can't handle a few (or many) emails a day asking what's wrong, and subsequently redirect them to the people who know about the problem (or fix them yourself, as many bugs filed upstream are only found out when used by more people downstream), you either need more people working on your project (which you should ALREADY be grateful for), or should probably go to work for a closed-source proprietary company like Apple (they never hear about anything downstream, or don't listen).
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