Mageia 9 releasedMatt@lemdro.id to Linux@lemmy.ml – 57 points – 1 years agomageia.orgMageia is a Linux distribution forked from Mandriva. Release notes17Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentDoesn't Debian already effectively fill that niche? The 18 months of support that Mageia has isn't very LTS compared to Debian's 5 years.Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. But I just think more options are always good. Only having one just limits us to a mono-culture if we don't want to go with some corporate solution. Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. According to this, All Debian releases since Debian 6 have had LTS support, which extends support for a total of 5 years.I stand corrected!If that's your argument, Mageia only supports each of the version for two years since release. I do agree that diversity is good tho.
Doesn't Debian already effectively fill that niche? The 18 months of support that Mageia has isn't very LTS compared to Debian's 5 years.Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. But I just think more options are always good. Only having one just limits us to a mono-culture if we don't want to go with some corporate solution. Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. According to this, All Debian releases since Debian 6 have had LTS support, which extends support for a total of 5 years.I stand corrected!If that's your argument, Mageia only supports each of the version for two years since release. I do agree that diversity is good tho.
Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. But I just think more options are always good. Only having one just limits us to a mono-culture if we don't want to go with some corporate solution. Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. According to this, All Debian releases since Debian 6 have had LTS support, which extends support for a total of 5 years.I stand corrected!If that's your argument, Mageia only supports each of the version for two years since release. I do agree that diversity is good tho.
Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade. According to this, All Debian releases since Debian 6 have had LTS support, which extends support for a total of 5 years.I stand corrected!
If that's your argument, Mageia only supports each of the version for two years since release. I do agree that diversity is good tho.
Doesn't Debian already effectively fill that niche? The 18 months of support that Mageia has isn't very LTS compared to Debian's 5 years.
Debian supports their version for two years. Then you need to upgrade.
But I just think more options are always good. Only having one just limits us to a mono-culture if we don't want to go with some corporate solution.
According to this, All Debian releases since Debian 6 have had LTS support, which extends support for a total of 5 years.
I stand corrected!
If that's your argument, Mageia only supports each of the version for two years since release.
I do agree that diversity is good tho.