> Again, you're completely missing the point of the comment you're replying to
Actually you and the GP are the ones missing my point by obsessing over a throwaway comment about this commit being over a year old. I was literally making zero conclusions from that observation. You guys are reading far far far too much into that comment. You seem to be projecting your annoyance about this change onto me as if I’m defending and supporting this change, yet literally nothing I’ve posted has supported that claim.
> average users don't pay attention to what's being staged upstream.
I’m going to assume that you skipped over my point about how any outrage will come from blog/Twitter/etc posts going viral.
This has already landed on some distros and most people, rightly or wrongly, went “meh”. If that last 30 years of the internet has taught me anything, it’s that people get outraged by posts, not by software. And the fact that youre arguing over a meta-point like when people will get annoyed, rather than discussing the technology itself, really just confirms my 3 decades of observations.
In fact the only reason we are discussing this now is because someone blogged about it and it hasn’t even hit the distro they’re using; they know about it because they read another news article who found out about it from the release notes posted on the mailing list and the authors then went back and checked the commits! Literally nothing in that chain of discovery was via experiencing the change itself in their chosen distros.
So to be clear:
I am NOT suggesting that the commit being > 1 year old means GNU have a free pass to make a breaking change. Any conclusion like that you derive from my posts are a misinterpretation and not worth arguing over.
Actually you and the GP are the ones missing my point by obsessing over a throwaway comment about this commit being over a year old. I was literally making zero conclusions from that observation. You guys are reading far far far too much into that comment. You seem to be projecting your annoyance about this change onto me as if I’m defending and supporting this change, yet literally nothing I’ve posted has supported that claim.
> average users don't pay attention to what's being staged upstream.
I’m going to assume that you skipped over my point about how any outrage will come from blog/Twitter/etc posts going viral.
This has already landed on some distros and most people, rightly or wrongly, went “meh”. If that last 30 years of the internet has taught me anything, it’s that people get outraged by posts, not by software. And the fact that youre arguing over a meta-point like when people will get annoyed, rather than discussing the technology itself, really just confirms my 3 decades of observations.
In fact the only reason we are discussing this now is because someone blogged about it and it hasn’t even hit the distro they’re using; they know about it because they read another news article who found out about it from the release notes posted on the mailing list and the authors then went back and checked the commits! Literally nothing in that chain of discovery was via experiencing the change itself in their chosen distros.
So to be clear:
I am NOT suggesting that the commit being > 1 year old means GNU have a free pass to make a breaking change. Any conclusion like that you derive from my posts are a misinterpretation and not worth arguing over.
Now, can we move on to more interesting things?