So this has bugged me every time I run Debian Stable: you find a bug. You try to report it, and are told not to bother because there's a newer version. There is no way to install the newer version without manually fiddling with pointlessly arcane configuration files that are sort of documented if you squint.
(Yes, the pun on "bug" is deliberate.) Why is reportbug even in Stable? Why not just replace it with a script that says "Sorry, bugs in Stable are never fixed. Try Testing." Seriously, that's literally the Debian policy, that only security fixes are done in Stable. Yes, technically if the version number in Stable and Experimental are the same, the bug might get fixed, but the fix would never actually be in Stable until the current Testing is released. So, actual question: how usable is the current Testing? Because Stable is ... not so much, and decreasing. (It's fine as a server OS, it's just as a client box that it effectively degrades over time as software upgrades don't happen.) -- Carl Fink c...@finknetwork.com https://reasonablyliterate.com https://nitpicking.com If you want to make a point, somebody will take the point and stab you with it. -Kenne Estes