On 04/04/2019 07:20 AM, Curt wrote:
On 2019-04-04, David <bouncingc...@gmail.com> wrote:
People accustomed to using synaptic might want to begin considering
alternative tools, because synaptic has been removed from buster.
More info:
https://tracker.debian.org/news/1037065/synaptic-removed-from-testing/
https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/synaptic
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=818366#55
https://release.debian.org/buster/freeze_policy.html
https://www.reddit.com/r/debian/comments/b7ylny/synaptic_no_longer_in_buster_should_i_start/
Owlett's gonna be pissed.
Unsupportable presumption.
If I find Buster "broken" [my definition], I skip that release.
I have no problems with Stretch.
I installed Buster *only* because an application I'm investigating
requires the version of Python in Buster. I have a personal preference
to not use back-ports. I generally avoid testing to the extent that when
a release moves from testing to stable, I wait for at least one point
release before installing.
I don't recall why, but I installed Stretch before it was "stable". I
had no problems. That encouraged me to try Buster. Doubt very much if my
recent problems with Synaptic have much to do directly with Buster.
[BUG745381 comes close to my concerns]
Synaptic doesn't play nice with the Wayland protocol, Gnome desktop with
Wayland is the new default desktop/login mode in Buster, so Synaptic's out?
I agree with one comment on Bug818366 says in part:
" ... if synaptic can't be run on the default desktop in the default
login mode, isn't the average user better of if we don't ship synaptic
with buster?"
I am NOT a Gnome user, but I understand my much preferred desktop, MATE,
is likely to have related problems.
Lots of veteran newbies will be seriously discombobulated if they don't have
their Synaptic, I'd guess.
Am I a "veteran newbie", or just someone with a different experience and
set of goals than you?
I took my first programming course before Linus created Linux [in fact
years before he was born ;] Although some of my jobs involved
programming, I never classed myself as a "programmer". I abandoned M$
because they thought they new my needs/desires better than I.