it means that you cannot know what version of the kernel you are getting
ready to release.
today we can talk that we are working on 2.6.27 or 'this feature was
accepted and will be in 2.6.27' any scheme that uses the date of the
release means that we can't do this.
I see this as a big problem with a fine-grained date scheme.
if we use the year in a date-based scheme and have a near end-of-year
release slip into the next year (2008.4 is released in Jan 2009) I don't
see this as a major problem (the bulk of the work was done in 2008 even if
the final release hit in 2009) under the current development cycle it's
not like this will end up with 'version 2009.2 released in 2011' type
emberrasements.
David Lang
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