12 years of Python and only at v2.2
Bradley D. Larson
blarson at crary.com
Wed Dec 4 10:04:58 EST 2002
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Wed Dec 4 10:04:58 EST 2002
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When you are revenue based (both sales and/or support) you must continue to produce a new version or upgrade regularly to produce revenue and keep your loyal support paying captives happy. This usually generates at least one "upgrade" (minor version) every 6 months and a major version upgrade every 12-18 months. Without this the revenue stream would come to a screeching halt. On this scedule you will naturally move up 6 to 7 major versions in a ten year period. Where revenue is not the driving factor updates are usually better thought out, better tested major version numbering is used for just that; major version changes. I work in IS and see a lot of "major version" changes that do not do anything more than a few cosmetics and some other minor changes yet the version jumps a who version. John Goerzen wrote: > I think the notion that any insight into the code itself can be gained by a > version number alone is generally fallacious, save perhaps for the ability > to determine how many marketroids are involved :-) -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: blarson.vcf Type: text/x-vcard Size: 400 bytes Desc: Card for Bradley D. Larson URL: <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/attachments/20021204/abc3ab50/attachment.vcf>
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