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Authored by: cjk fossman on Monday, March 25 2013 @ 08:27 AM EDT |
Ubuntu distinguishes an LTS release by the support
commitment that goes with
it, nothing more.
Here is what they say about it.
The Ubuntu
team broke new ground in committing to
a programme of scheduled releases on a
predictable six-month
basis. It was decided that every fourth release, issued
on a
two-year basis, would receive long-term support (LTS). LTS
releases are
typically used for large-scale deployments.
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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- And - Authored by: cjk fossman on Monday, March 25 2013 @ 08:29 AM EDT
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Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, March 25 2013 @ 02:11 PM EDT |
>However, 12.04 is still the current LTS release.
I was using Ubuntu 12.04. I keep running into a bug, but can't report that bug,
because Canonical is no longer accepting bug reports for that version.
I've since switched to Ubuntu Studio, and whilst I have the same bugs, bug
reports appear to be accepted.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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