On Sat, 31 Mar 2001, Martin Schulze wrote: > 2. Type of Debian CD > > [ ] potato installation > [ ] potato installation, with additions like Gnome, KDE, XF4 etc. > [ ] woody installation > [ ] unstable installation > [ ] potato demo system > [ ] potato demo system, with additions like Gnome, KDE, XF4 etc. > [ ] woody demo system
Haven't been following the discussion closely, but it seems to me that there's no fundamental difference between .debs and a "live" file system -- because a live fs needs 1) to be installed with boot-floppies of some kind, 2) .debs to be installed upon it. And both 1) and 2) can also be present on the CD in original form. So I think it should really be two questions: 2. Release [ ] potato [ ] potato with additions "to be determined later" [ ] woody [ ] sid 3. CD Type [ ] installation [ ] live fs ("demo") Personally, I'd go for "potato with additions" and "installation" because this demonstrates best Debian's ideas of stability, (half-)upgradeability and "completeness" (i.e. much software). I'm afraid that if you make a live fs, there won't be much space for all the interesting programs that people _really_ want to use, and you'll get some throw-away demo thingy that forces people to buy the whole CD set if they want to go use Debian on a daily basis. Besides, people will need to be able to apt-get install stuff (from the CD) to really begin appreciating The Debian Way[tm] ;-) Regards, Anne Bezemer