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I've been running Fedora-13 for a few months now (after a disaster run-in with Ubuntu). I don't fully (or even minimally, really) understand the release cycle of the OS. I see, according to their website, they release "a new version of Fedora approximately every 6 months and provides updated packages (maintenance) to these releases for approximately 13 months."
If I'm on Fedora-13 now and want to keep pace with the latest and greatest version but I don't want to deal with the bugs from the cutting edge, when should I think about upgrading and what version should I consider upgrading to?
I get your stance....but using CentOS to actively use one generation behind tutorials for fedora is more effective than using a BSD imho with BSD tutorials. I personally like BSD, but for a redhat breed adopter, tutorials are easier to come by imo. – RobotHumans – 2010-11-29T18:40:31.853
second, I was trying to be more kind than: "In answer to If I'm on Fedora-13 now and want to keep pace with the latest and greatest version but I don't want to deal with the bugs from the cutting edge...compile from source, solve your own bugs, use a stable distro, or expletives deleted" – RobotHumans – 2010-11-29T18:45:09.093