Well, I was googling around one day, trying to find something about KDE and Wayland being developed for Kubuntu and I came across a blog from a developer who said:
http://blog.martin-graesslin.com/blo...ir-in-kubuntu/
So I started thinking long and hard about what I would think as the best way for me to get my stable OS without too much breakage. Please note the 'I's' and 'me's'. I'm not saying that my actions are the best actions for you. TBH, I really, really like Kubuntu.
I started thinking about the best distro to switch to. After a bunch of Googling, I had narrowed it down to Arch and OpenSUSE. I also had to take into account that my wife would also be running what I was running, on her computer. I decided on, and installed, OpenSUSE. I've been running OpenSUSE 13.1 on my laptop for about a month. I don't use my laptop often, but when I do, it appears very reliable and stable.
As of 8:30pm, 1/12/13, I have finished migrating to OpenSUSE 13.1 on my main computer.
With that, I would really like to thank everybody here who has helped me get, fix, adjust and tweak Kubuntu, both directly (via direct forum help) and indirectly (via google). The staff and users here are wonderful! Who knows... OpenSUSE may sux and I may be back on Kubuntu in a month or three...
This has quite some influence on a possible adoption. I do not know of any kde-workspace developer using (K)Ubuntu. I do not see how anyone would work on it or how we should be able to review code or even maintain code. It would mean all the adoption would have to go into ifdef sections nobody compiles and nobody runs. This is the best way to ensure that it starts to bit-rot. Even more our CI system runs on openSUSE so not even the CI would be able to detect breakage. Of course a downstream like Kubuntu could develop the adoption and carry it as a patch on top of upstream, but I would highly recommend them to not do this as KWin’s source code churn is too high. Also we all agree that downstream patches are evil and we would no longer be able to help in any way downstream’s user from a support perspective.
So I started thinking long and hard about what I would think as the best way for me to get my stable OS without too much breakage. Please note the 'I's' and 'me's'. I'm not saying that my actions are the best actions for you. TBH, I really, really like Kubuntu.
I started thinking about the best distro to switch to. After a bunch of Googling, I had narrowed it down to Arch and OpenSUSE. I also had to take into account that my wife would also be running what I was running, on her computer. I decided on, and installed, OpenSUSE. I've been running OpenSUSE 13.1 on my laptop for about a month. I don't use my laptop often, but when I do, it appears very reliable and stable.
As of 8:30pm, 1/12/13, I have finished migrating to OpenSUSE 13.1 on my main computer.
With that, I would really like to thank everybody here who has helped me get, fix, adjust and tweak Kubuntu, both directly (via direct forum help) and indirectly (via google). The staff and users here are wonderful! Who knows... OpenSUSE may sux and I may be back on Kubuntu in a month or three...
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