Hi,

Could someone help clarify for me what my options are to upgrade to an 
app version that my distro's package manager does not support?

To illustrate my question and goal: last April I installed Debian 4.0, 
whose Synaptic tool supports OpenOffice 2.0

But with OpenOffice at 2.3, how can get my paws on that current release?

The way I see it my options are, in order of effort:

1) wait for next Debian stable release
 - unspecified release date
 - I assume/hope next release will install over 4.0, but expect distro 
will still lag a given app's current release

2) in Debian 4.0 uninstall OpenOffice 2.0 and install 2.3
 - somehow use for eg. Synaptic to advance distro to support a more 
current app version

3) Switch to a more progressive distro like Ubuntu, with routine 
releases in April and October.
 - best in the long run, to keep up with current app release

Have I missed anything or can anyone shed light on whether 2) is doable 
and routine or instead impractical and inadvisable? Are
package managers such as Synaptic (I believe Ubuntu's Adept uses the 
same underlying APT tool), or some other tool(?) intended to do 2) or am 
I out of luck?

Thanks for any recommendations, pointers!

  John


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