On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 10:40:25AM +0000, Lisi Reisz wrote: > 2008/12/24 Lisi Reisz <lisi.re...@gmail.com>: <snip> > > To answer my own question, when I googled for the third time, I > obviously finally asked the right question. (Sorry to have asked the > wrong ones before. :-( ). > > A large number of packages, which includes kdepim, kmailcvt and kmail > itself, is still the KDE 3.5.9 version, while many of the libraries > are already KDE 3.5.10. > > So I just have to wait a little more patiently, and hopefully all will be > well. > > Lisi > The Debian software release system has more or less 3 streams: stable, testing and unstable. Software that is intended to be released follows the path: unstable, then testing, then stable (in 99% of cases). The path bug fixes take is that they are noted by someone, someone finds a fix and then someone trusted by debian uploads the new package to unstable. A fix can take 1 minute, 1 hour, 1 day, or even 10 years as was recently noted on planet.debian.org. Luckily a great many happen in less that 10 days by a Debian contributer or someone upstream. And general advice for unstable users in your situation on debian-user is 'wait a few days'. But figuring this out is part of the adventure :) -k -- | .''`. == Debian GNU/Linux == | my web site: | | : :' : The Universal |mysite.verizon.net/kevin.mark/| | `. `' Operating System | go to counter.li.org and | | `- http://www.debian.org/ | be counted! #238656 | | my keyserver: subkeys.pgp.net | my NPO: cfsg.org | |join the new debian-community.org to help Debian! | |_______ Unless I ask to be CCd, assume I am subscribed _______|
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