Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta
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@hobbit666 said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
Ah, EdgeSwitch firmware 1.7.3 is still in beta
Will not be able to test as the switch is in production.
Might install it tomorrow as it looks like I'm off due to snow and working from home. Might try the beta firmware on the switch under my desk and see what happens lol
I have never had the beta firmware for any of the routers or switches cause a fail, but it is still not something I would do in production.
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@jaredbusch it only powers my pc and other pc so it's ok to risk.
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Website still show as beta?
Might leave it now until support for EdgeSwitch and Unifi came aboard. -
@hobbit666 said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
Website still show as beta?
No one ever said it was not beta. I said officially rolls out.
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@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@hobbit666 said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
Website still show as beta?
No one ever said it was not beta. I said officially rolls out.
To normal people, officially released (or rolled out) means past beta. A beta release being "not released yet." The beta is released to the public, but the product is not. So you could say "UNMS Beta Officially Rolled Out", but not that "UNMS Officially Rolled Out".
If it was me having said it, you'd call it a term from "Scottland". People definitely universally use the term released to mean... well released. That the vendor sees the final product as now on the market.
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@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@hobbit666 said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
Website still show as beta?
No one ever said it was not beta. I said officially rolls out.
To normal people, officially released (or rolled out) means past beta. A beta release being "not released yet." The beta is released to the public, but the product is not. So you could say "UNMS Beta Officially Rolled Out", but not that "UNMS Officially Rolled Out".
If it was me having said it, you'd call it a term from "Scottland". People definitely universally use the term released to mean... well released. That the vendor sees the final product as now on the market.
The "public beta" state is a commonly accepted officially rolled out state for software products.
Many software products never leave "beta" and are officially out for years.
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Title updated to make @scottalanmiller happy.
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@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@hobbit666 said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
Website still show as beta?
No one ever said it was not beta. I said officially rolls out.
To normal people, officially released (or rolled out) means past beta. A beta release being "not released yet." The beta is released to the public, but the product is not. So you could say "UNMS Beta Officially Rolled Out", but not that "UNMS Officially Rolled Out".
If it was me having said it, you'd call it a term from "Scottland". People definitely universally use the term released to mean... well released. That the vendor sees the final product as now on the market.
The "public beta" state is a commonly accepted officially rolled out state for software products.
Many software products never leave "beta" and are officially out for years.
I don't know any product of that sort or anyone who uses that term. Do you have an example? And, I can tell you, if you show something in beta, it means it isn't released. So it's confusing to say that there is released beta products. They are competing terms. Released meaning "released" and beta meaning "not released." Public beta literally means an unreleased product that the public can test to see if they want it once released.
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@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
@hobbit666 said in Ubiquiti officially rolls out UNMS:
Website still show as beta?
No one ever said it was not beta. I said officially rolls out.
To normal people, officially released (or rolled out) means past beta. A beta release being "not released yet." The beta is released to the public, but the product is not. So you could say "UNMS Beta Officially Rolled Out", but not that "UNMS Officially Rolled Out".
If it was me having said it, you'd call it a term from "Scottland". People definitely universally use the term released to mean... well released. That the vendor sees the final product as now on the market.
The "public beta" state is a commonly accepted officially rolled out state for software products.
Many software products never leave "beta" and are officially out for years.
If it's out and maintained for years - is it really beta at that point?
Frankly - what's the line in the sand that changes something from Beta to not Beta?
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@dashrender said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
Frankly - what's the line in the sand that changes something from Beta to not Beta?
The developer removing the word Beta.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_release_life_cycle
Beta literally means it's not reached candidacy for release yet. RC is still not released, but is what they might consider for release once tested. Notice Beta is in the middle of the "non-released" period.
These are as the terms have always been used, even going back to the early 1980s and, I assume, long before that. Release being such a structured term that it is nearly impossible to define released without using the term released itself.
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@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
@dashrender said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
Frankly - what's the line in the sand that changes something from Beta to not Beta?
The developer removing the word Beta.
Right. Same with anything. The vendor deciding that it is ready to be released and officially releasing it. As long as they keep the term beta, they are clarifying that it's not released.
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Beta is important because it means if you do use it, and something breaks or changes on you, you have zero recourse. You could never, ever go after a vendor that didn't support it, didn't maintain it, just changed formats, dropped it, or whatever. In any contract or legal dispute, or just trying to go after them publicly, they'd point out that you had acknowledged that you weren't using a finished product and were just looking at a preview that they were playing around with for testing and that you could not have had those expectations of it.
Like how the Spice points on SW are still in beta and can be removed or changed at any time
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This matters a lot for the other thread where someone was upset that Ubiquiti wasn't supporting the product that he bought. But it was a beta and not a product made yet by the vendor. So hard to understand how he expected support on something that doesn't even exist yet. No matter how much he complained, it didn't change the fact that the vendor (the same one as here) had not yet made the product that he was claiming that they owed him support on.
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@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
Beta is important because it means if you do use it, and something breaks or changes on you, you have zero recourse. You could never, ever go after a vendor that didn't support it, didn't maintain it, just changed formats, dropped it, or whatever. In any contract or legal dispute, or just trying to go after them publicly, they'd point out that you had acknowledged that you weren't using a finished product and were just looking at a preview that they were playing around with for testing and that you could not have had those expectations of it.
Actually, no. Beta does not mean anything like that. The software license agreement defines that. If the agreement defines that beta has no recourse, then yes. But only because it is defined in the license agreement.
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@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
This matters a lot for the other thread where someone was upset that Ubiquiti wasn't supporting the product that he bought. But it was a beta and not a product made yet by the vendor. So hard to understand how he expected support on something that doesn't even exist yet. No matter how much he complained, it didn't change the fact that the vendor (the same one as here) had not yet made the product that he was claiming that they owed him support on.
And like I just said, this mattered because of the agreement defining it as such.
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@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
Beta is important because it means if you do use it, and something breaks or changes on you, you have zero recourse. You could never, ever go after a vendor that didn't support it, didn't maintain it, just changed formats, dropped it, or whatever. In any contract or legal dispute, or just trying to go after them publicly, they'd point out that you had acknowledged that you weren't using a finished product and were just looking at a preview that they were playing around with for testing and that you could not have had those expectations of it.
Actually, no. Beta does not mean anything like that. The software license agreement defines that. If the agreement defines that beta has no recourse, then yes. But only because it is defined in the license agreement.
Even so, beta in the title means something and would provide strong legal backing that the customer was told up front that the product was released yet. If there is conflicting documentation, that's a problem, but it would be in conflict with that documentation.
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@jaredbusch said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
This matters a lot for the other thread where someone was upset that Ubiquiti wasn't supporting the product that he bought. But it was a beta and not a product made yet by the vendor. So hard to understand how he expected support on something that doesn't even exist yet. No matter how much he complained, it didn't change the fact that the vendor (the same one as here) had not yet made the product that he was claiming that they owed him support on.
And like I just said, this mattered because of the agreement defining it as such.
The agreement just agreed with the beta title. No extra agreement is needed for an unreleased product. That he got the product at all meant that someone along the chain had taken something that wasn't released yet and sold it like it was. That's the break point and where there was a problem. The product itself doesn't yet exist, that alone is all that matters. UBNT doesn't need special paperwork to "not support products they don't make."
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@scottalanmiller said in Ubiquiti publicly rolls out UNMS Beta:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_release_life_cycle
Beta literally means it's not reached candidacy for release yet. RC is still not released, but is what they might consider for release once tested. Notice Beta is in the middle of the "non-released" period.
These are as the terms have always been used, even going back to the early 1980s and, I assume, long before that. Release being such a structured term that it is nearly impossible to define released without using the term released itself.
While I'm sure this has no baring in reality - for me release is a point but the public can get support for the thing.