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Well, what Debian is doing is not a time based release cylce like Fedora, Mandrake or Ubuntu. They will freeze Debian Testing in december and they will start fixing RC bugs. There is no real time line from there on out. Theoretically they could release in january (highly unlikely) or in june (knowing Debian it could even be september)
So time based freeze is a more accurate description of what they are doing unless you consider within +-6 month a fixed time.
http://mdzlog.alcor.net/2009/07/29/debian-is-not-switching-to-time-...
Matt knows more about Debian than 99.99% of OSnews posters .. so for me this argument is settled.
It is misleading stating that
"Debian Adopts Two-Year Time-Based Release Cycle".
The article here quotes the following
"Time-based freezes will allow the Debian Project to blend the predictability of time based releases with its well established policy of feature based releases."
To break it down, they state that they blend two things
1. Time-based release cycle
2. Feature based release
What they get is not a
Time-based release cycle, but a
Time-based freeze cycle.




Member since:
2005-06-29
It's still a time-based release cycle - it's just that because Debian chose a longer timeframe, they also have more leeway between dev freeze and release. Ubuntu also has leeway between dev freeze and release, it's just shorter because the cycle is shorter as well.