Reply 20 of 24, by calvin
wrote:I just find it strange use of terminology used to publically name a version, since it gives no merit to end-testers/users. Its a […]
wrote:RC is the stage after beta - they just keep releasing RCs until they think it's good enough to ship, at which point they take the RC label off and call it stable.
I just find it strange use of terminology used to publically name a version, since it gives no merit to end-testers/users. Its an internal phrase for a non-regression tested beta, but its still a beta? Where I work, distinguishing it as a beta (as opposed to release) is also important for liable reasons, i.e we cannot support, nor be held responsible for non-release (beta) versions.
Seems like MS have been doing this years (trying to figure what the phrase means that is) 😀
http://www.informationweek.com/analysts-micro … /d/d-id/1046790
The difference is in the development cycle. In the RC, you won't be seeing any more changes but bug and security fixes. Betas and alphas are more volatile.
2xP2 450, 512 MB SDR, V3 2000, Asus P2B-D, Windows 2000
P4 2.6, 2 GB DDR1, Radeon 9600 Pro, P4P800, Windows XP
Alpha 21164, 512 MB, Permedia 2, KZPCM, AlphaPC 164, NT 4.0