Well said, Ashutosh. :) Totally agree with what you said. @Ram: Going OT here, as you expect discussions on the decisions and not solutions, but I can't resist. :) A very simple way out, for the missing applications exists. I anyway use it pretty regularly, as the iso's downloaded at my place by most people are the Ubuntu Live ones, and I'm a Kubuntu guy, plus I install a lot of extra stuff, that I need once in a blue moon. When you are about to upgrade, take a dump of all the packages installed on your system by using dselect. It gives a nice little text file with names of packages and their current state (installed/not installed). Open that file in an editor, and clean it of all applications that have specific package version numbers, and the kernel related packages. Also clean up other files that you feel might conflict. On the new install, again use dselect to mark those packages for install by letting it import that text file, and then go ahead and just run apt-get and ask it to take all those markings that dselect has done. AFAIK, a way to do this also exists in Synaptic, but I have not tried really hard to search for it. :)
Ninad S. Pundalik http://twitter.com/ni_nad http://ninadpundalik.co.cc/blog GPG Key Fingerprint: 2DF7 B856 C75E C9F9 0504 C0EF D456 1946 7C45 2C69 -- ubuntu-in mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-in
