On Saturday, 20 August 2005 14:16, Klaus Ethgen wrote: > Am Sa den 20. Aug 2005 um 13:48 schrieb Adeodato Simó: > > This is the best _sincere_ advice I can give to you: "stop using > > unstable". > > Well, I have no problemes by myself using unstable but if there is > something not working this is a bug and I will report them if it is not > still reported and not fixed with some uploads. > > If no one is reporting bugs in unstable then buggy software goes to > stable and there will be no sense for unstable anymore. > > Unfortunality there is a tag testing but no tag sid or unstable when > reporting bugs. Everything you have said makes sense when you track Debian development and are aware of the current status of unstable.
Just now unstable is "enjoying" the C++ transition. During the transition, as explained by Adeodato in a message some weeks ago, KDE is *expected* to be "un-dist-upgradable" for some weeks. In that message Adeodato explicitly told to not dist-upgrade KDE. The facts are: a) you run apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade (against the previous advice). Of course, you didn't checked the output of apt-get, so you didn't realized it was uninstalling lots of packages b) as a consecuence of a), you broke your KDE installation, found that the package kdm didn't have a binary (damn!, it had been deinstalled in a)) and reported it as a bug without checking if the package was installed c) you keep arguing and blaming others of your faults So the point is: NO. Reporting problems already known, announced and expected by the developers doesn't help at all. Best regards -- Isaac Clerencia at Warp Networks, http://www.warp.es Work: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | Debian: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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