>>>>> "Craig" == Craig Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Craig> debian provides mechanisms for easy upgrade between release Craig> versions, and we always have provided that - why complicate Craig> matters with branched sub-releases of old versions? You say stable is "old". That is exactly Russell's point. Some people want a mostly stable system, but need some up-to-date packages from woody. I wouldn't suggest going any further back then stable though. Craig> for example, ask yourself: why is libc6-2.2.2-potato1 (or Craig> whatever the potato version would be) any "better" or Craig> "safer" than just installing libc6-2.2.2 from woody or sid? Craig> i can't see how it could be, and all you've achieved is Craig> having two divergent versions of 2.2.2 to support. I think you missed Russell's point. That was: compile unstable packages against stable's libc6. So libc6 would not be included in this list. Craig> debian is a "live" distribution, easily upgraded in place Craig> at any time over the internet - why limit yourself to Craig> looking at debian in a way which is more suited to Craig> commercial CD-ROM only closed source systems? Because some people don't want to upgrade libc6 on a stable system (ie. they want a mostly stable system), but require new features of particular packages in unstable, and are willing to risk the chance that these new packages may be broken. Craig> IMO, forcing debian into that model is missing a large part Craig> of the point of debian. Craig> potato's been released. woody's getting closer to Craig> freeze. lets move on. woody's release is still months away (dare I say almost a year?). Sure, another approach is to compile your own version of the unstable package, but Russell takes then one step further to have a central repository for unstable package for stable. Instead of the current situation of having many different apt repositories, each with different selections of packages compiled for stable, you would have one big repository that could be used by everyone. -- Brian May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>