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From: | Ron Johnson |
Subject: | Re: [Pan-users] Re: Better processing of very large groups? |
Date: | Fri, 03 Jul 2009 09:06:06 -0500 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686 (x86_64); en-US; rv:1.8.1.19) Gecko/20090103 Thunderbird/2.0.0.19 Mnenhy/0.7.6.666 |
On 2009-07-03 08:49, Duncan wrote: [snip]
The proprietaryware world is of course rather different, since there's generally only a very limited few bit-unique binary versions out there, often only one for a particular product version, and it's thus much simpler to provide binary patches for them.
Even in the closed-source world, there can be lots of "sub-minor" versions out there, especially for stuff like Oracle, which releases security upgrades on a regular basis, not to mention supporting many OSs on many architectures. You'd need *lots* of binary diffs, and that's a hassle to manage, both from, for example, Oracle's side and from the customer's side.
In this day of high-bandwidth pipes, and DVDs-via-FedEx, there really is no overriding need for binary diffs.
-- Scooty Puff, Sr The Doom-Bringer
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