On Saturday 18 February 2012 06:16:07 am Lisi
wrote:
On Saturday 18 February 2012 10:14:17 Werner Joss
wrote:
On Saturday 18 February 2012 11:07:56 Lisi
wrote:
> I am baffled by this. Ubuntu _has_ got version numbers. 9.04, 9.10,
> 10.04, 10.10, 11.04, 11.10 etc., and they go in numerical order. The
> fact that they also tell you when exactly that version was released
> doesn't detract from that.
>
> And Trinity certainly has numbers (in numerical order). So as I say,
> I am unable to understand the problem.....
i think the OP had just the problem to always remember the correct
relation between code name and version number, e.g. what was exactly
maverick ? (10.04, 10.10 ?)
- i confirm having this problem also, from time to time :)
Me too! They are even more silly than teh Debian ones - and taht takes
some doing!!
But the OP actually said:
<quote>
Now, i have to cope with childish names. Even the download page for
Ubuntu uses version numbers, so it´s not even possible for me to decide
which is which.
[snip]
And PLEASE, use version numbers in the future!
</quote>
Looking at the main page at
trinitydesktop.org, you see "Debian Lenny" and
"Debian Squeeze", not "Debian 5.0" and "Debian 6.0". This
may be what the
OP was referring to. The only reason I know the difference is because I
have been using Debian for just under a year. If I hadn't done my research
on Debian beforehand, I'd have no inkling of an idea what "Squeeze" and
"Lenny" referred to. Since I'm not an Ubuntu user, I have not been keeping
track of their code names, so I could not tell you the difference between
"Karmic" and "Lucid" except that they are two different versions of
Ubuntu,
but I do not know what those versions are.
I suspect that the reason that Ubuntu follows the Debian idea of using names
as the primary way to identify each release, as opposed to version numbers,
is because it's quite a good idea and it's a good idea because it makes it
easy to upgrade, or not, from one release to the next.