![]() The upgrade to vSphere 5.1 was one of the most horrific I had. A delusion like “nobody gets fired for buying IBM” or “we’ll be whisked away on the approaching comet.” Personally, I should get twitchy when I think about versions ending in. 0, coupled with some form of cult-like shared delusion. My best theory is that these people have some sort of PTSD from a. ![]() ![]() “Dot-oh code is always horrible,” they volunteer. Some people say that because 6.0 ends in. The way I see it, the most stable product is the version right before the big service pack. The real bug fixing gains are, to borrow a baseball term, in the “small ball” between the big plays. Especially with large releases, like service packs. Some are old, some are new, and while vendors try to make the number of bugs go down the truth is that isn’t the case all the time. Software is a rolling collection of bugs. I’ve always thought that approach is crap. Some people say that you should wait until the first major update, like the first update pack or first service pack. A Magic 8 Ball would say “reply hazy, try again.” I’ve been asked a few times about when I’m planning to upgrade to VMware vSphere 6. Jenga champion by Jessica Gardner, on Flickr.
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