Hi Marc,
yes, I agree.
I will again drop DEP-11 (package) meta-data support and limit APT
translations (see attachments).
Best regards,
-Sedat-
On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 8:08 PM Marc Haber wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> thanks for your comments. I have in the mean time decided that plasma
> discover is prob
Hi,
thanks for your comments. I have in the mean time decided that plasma
discover is probably not the correct tool to maintain a Debian system
and will continue to recommend using the command line tools or synaptic
if a clickable frontend is absolutely desired by the local user even if
KDE is bei
>
> > on my new notebook I am trying to do more administrative tasks in
> > graphical tools to be able to answer beginners' questions in the unix
> > user group. That also means package management, which I usually do with
> > apt on the command line.
> >
> >
ne.
KDE Discover seems to not quite the package management tool I
am looking for. It only says that my Debian unstable offers
like 2000 packages for installation (the notebook alone has
2400 packages installed), it says that the installation only
has 240 packages in
gt; on my new notebook I am trying to do more administrative tasks in
>> graphical tools to be able to answer beginners' questions in the unix
>> user group. That also means package management, which I usually do with
>> apt on the command line.
>>
>> KDE Discove
th
> apt on the command line.
>
> KDE Discover seems to not quite the package management tool I am looking
> for. It only says that my Debian unstable offers like 2000 packages for
> installation (the notebook alone has 2400 packages installed), it says
> that the installation only
I love KDE, but I am not aware of a full-fledged KDE-based package management
tool. I often use KDE Discover to install updates, mostly because I want to
be aware of any improvements to Discover. But I drop back to using Synaptic,
which is built on GTK, or apt on the command-line, when I need
Hi,
on my new notebook I am trying to do more administrative tasks in
graphical tools to be able to answer beginners' questions in the unix
user group. That also means package management, which I usually do with
apt on the command line.
KDE Discover seems to not quite the package management
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