9 messages in com.mysql.lists.mysqlRE: Version 4 Schedule RE: Roadmap
FromSent OnAttachments
Steve Suehring18 Jan 2002 07:33 
Victoria Reznichenko18 Jan 2002 10:18 
Jeremy Zawodny18 Jan 2002 14:08 
Jeremy Zawodny18 Jan 2002 23:18 
Emmanuel van der Meulen18 Jan 2002 23:22 
Jeremy Zawodny18 Jan 2002 23:28 
Emmanuel van der Meulen18 Jan 2002 23:51 
Jeremy Zawodny19 Jan 2002 22:22 
Emmanuel van der Meulen20 Jan 2002 00:59 
Subject:RE: Version 4 Schedule RE: Roadmap
From:Emmanuel van der Meulen (emma@icon.co.za)
Date:01/20/2002 12:59:55 AM
List:com.mysql.lists.mysql

Hello Jeremy,

Thank you for keeping correspondence.

Kind regards Emmanuel

-----Original Message----- From: Jeremy Zawodny [mailto:jzaw@yahoo-inc.com] Sent: 20 January 2002 08:22 To: Emmanuel van der Meulen Cc: mys@lists.mysql.com Subject: Re: Version 4 Schedule RE: Roadmap

On Sat, Jan 19, 2002 at 09:51:39AM +0200, Emmanuel van der Meulen wrote:

Hello all,

On 19 January 2002 09:28, Jeremy Zawodny wrote;

On Sat, Jan 19, 2002 at 09:22:38AM +0200, Emmanuel van der

Meulen wrote:

Hello all,

To both above topics there have been answers, thank you, but these answers are not clear at all.

That's because preicting the future is rather difficult. It's a fuzzy system, so there are few clear answers.

Then let me phrase my question differently;

Version 4.1 is earmarked to have 'stored procedures'. So I'm keen to know when that version is planned for release.

Some indication based on previous timings would suffice, and I understand this to be a difficult question, thus in the spirit of all of above, I would not hold such timing indication against anyone if it turns out before or later.

Would MySQL consider to publish something like the following as found at Netbeans; http://www.netbeans.org/articles/roadmap.html and even though their roadmap is not specific, some indication of timing is derive-able?

Hey, that's pretty cool.

There's a more low-tech version for MySQL here, I guess:

http://www.mysql.com/doc/T/O/TODO.html

It's the same idea.

If MySQL policy is to refrain from getting into timing questimates, it is 100% understandable and acceptable, then please merely state it as such.

Well, I can say that they've given dates in the past, but Murpy's Law tends to get in the way.

MySQL 3.23.41-max: up 17 days, processed 406,765,826 queries (272/sec. avg)