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1) 3.10.0-rc1 is a release candidate, not "unstable" at all. Hell, I've been running release candidate kernels since December on my [b]Primary[b/] Workstation+Gaming rig and haven't had any instability at all.
2) I don't own any intel cpus, haven't since my atom died, my pentium e4300 was outdated, and my P3-550MHz Katmai was retired.
3) I like to game. I also own SSDs and other cutting-edge hardware. Why would I want to be stuck in 2012 (or 1979 without a GUI)?
Well, they might release "stable" kernel or rc-999, but like most features in that kernel are experimental, wtf stability can be in linux in general ???
Well, they might release "stable" kernel or rc-999, but like most features in that kernel are experimental, wtf stability can be in linux in general ???
New features are often placed in the staging tree of the kernel.
Also, new features are often not compiled in, they are hidden behind experimental flags that have to be specially configured to be enabled for the compiler to compile the kernel with those features.
Well, they might release "stable" kernel or rc-999, but like most features in that kernel are experimental, wtf stability can be in linux in general ???
first kernel don't receive patches without extensive test, many of those features are in development from long time ago and made it in this release cuz it has enough feedback and test to be accepted as stable enough to go through extensive testing
second kernel dev system have many interlaced development stages and check points and sub system maintainers, so for a patch to be accepted it has to pass cleanly many many eyes before is even considered for merge in mainline
third if you have a patch that looks good to developers but is invasive or HW dependant and cannot get enough testing to be sure is safe and stable is merged in staging until is tested enough to leave it.
all this meaning literate yourself before posting, this is a technical forum not FACEBOOK, if you want information or have questions ask politely!! this is not your MMO forum either.
note: so far for me 3.10-rc1 is rock solid in my 3 PC so far
Good to finally see good progress on the GPU driver side. Maybe we'll see an OSS driver getting within the performance levels of proprietary driver by the end of the year.
One thing that made me chuckle is the DynTicks support comment. Are they actually planning to improve performance or is just aimed at a different work load than what has been looked at?
And most of the time so many checks is not enough, there is just too big chance to break your system with those "rc" versions, and sometimes even with stable ...
And most of the time so many checks is not enough, there is just too big chance to break your system with those "rc" versions, and sometimes even with stable ...
For people like you, Ubuntu's shipping Kernel is more than fine
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