I think that update-manager should show version numbers BY DEFAULT.  The
point of an update manager is to, well... update your software.  As
such, you need to know some things:  Name of package, whether the update
is critical or not, the size of the download, a changelog and list of
issues fixed, THE VERSION YOU CURRENTLY HAVE, and THE VERSION TO WHICH
YOU ARE UPDATING.

It is a sad day when version numbers are considered "too complex."
Heck, cars are sold by make, model, and year (more complex than one
version number, in my opinion.)  We trumpet Ubuntu by VERSION (and
codename.)  High profile products have version numbers (iTunes 6, iTunes
7, blah blah blah, Windows 3.1, Windows 98 SE, Windows XP, Windows Vista
[insert edition name here].)  Windows is unfortunately the most popular
desktop OS, and has been for some time, and they have downright UGLY
version names.  Of course, half the people out there don't know what the
heck they're running or doing on their computers, but the mad naming of
Windows hasn't been an impediment.  Note that I'm not arguing that just
because someone else does something, we should do it, also.  I'm saying
that version numbers are not too complex for people.

Actually, I would make the argument that NOT having version numbers is
more confusing.  Imagine an update comes out for, say, pidgin.  Then
another update comes out for pidgin some time later.  Joe User will
think, "Well, great, I updated pidgin a while ago... don't really know
what happened, but... what's the difference here?"  As updates for the
same package keep coming out, people will want a simple way to "know"
that they're actually getting something new.  Updating "pidgin" to
"pidgin" to "pidgin" is kind of... unenlightening, whereas it is obvious
that updating "pidgin 2.0" to "pidgin 2.0.1" to "pidgin 2.0.2" is
actually, well, an update.

-- 
Update Manager doesn't display package versions anymore
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/189406
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