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In the beginning, there was CVS. Then came Subversion, solved the problems with CVS. Then came distributed version control systems like Bazar, Git, Mercurial etc, solving the problems with Subversion. That's were we are today.

Is this where it ends? Or do we need more? What is the next version control system all about? Please note that this is more about concepts than specific implementations. Proprietary solutions are all out of the scope of this discussion.

This is a philosophical question. I am asking because we had this discussion over lunch at my job. I guess there are no right or wrong answers, but I am interested in the ideas.

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Johan - I think this question may be more appropriate in Programmers (programmers.stackexchange.com) as this is more of a conceptual one rather than one that will have an answer for an actual problem. See stackoverflow.com/faq#dontask for more details. – Zack Macomber Jan 17 '12 at 15:39
In the beginning was SCCS; then came RCS; then came CVS initially built upon RCS but later not using RCS directly. And that's just on Unix. There were probably other VCS (version control systems) on other platforms before SCCS. – Jonathan Leffler Jan 17 '12 at 15:43

closed as not constructive by Ernest Friedman-Hill, Martin Geisler, Jonathan Leffler, Edward Thomson, skaffman Jan 17 '12 at 15:45

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