Now that 10.04 has reached end of life...

Hans Joachim Desserud ubuntu at desserud.org
Sun Jun 21 15:03:17 UTC 2015


>> These were mainly straight-forward reproducible bugs though. I reckon
>> most developers will be looking for bugs affecting the current
>> development release.
> 
> The idea is that we have more bugs than what we can work on

Yes, I'm aware. It's a bit unfortunate, but I try to help out. :)

> so right
> now is better to spend time on known ones.

I have to admit I don't fully understand how you define as a known bug 
here.
I guess I should clarify that I'm talking about bugs I've either 
confirmed
or comment on in some way in the past.

If a bug is reported (and confirmed), I would count it among known 
issues.
What isn't known in most of these cases is whether the bug has survived
through years of new versions and releases. It may have been resolved, 
either
upstream or a new version of a depending library or something else. 
However,
if it remains, it still something affecting the latest development 
release
which should be fixed.

---
mvh / best regards
Hans Joachim Desserud
http://desserud.org




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