On 18/04/13 02:46, Markus Raab wrote: > Hello! > > Julian wrote: >> Having a stable and tested operating system and its core packages is >> important and packages end up in stable that have gone through the >> rigmarole. > > I fully agree! > >> Rolling releases of individual packages are everywhere (downloadable >> .deb packages or little source repos), most of the time (all the time?) >> these are not critical core OS libraries or applications. > > I would not forget backports as "rolling release" for stable. I am looking > forward to wheezy lifetime if backports are more used when they are directly > in main archive. > > best regards > Markus > > There's no wheezy backports until its release, or thats the process afaik.
Something more KDE focused. I do understand that fragmenting releases can create problems on its own. But I can't see a problem if packages are strictly allocated officially by debian. "-t wheezy-kde" works for me, but I can't see why a structure such as "/debian-rolling-release-kde wheezy main" wouldn't work either. People desperate for 4.10 are installing experimental, which is crazy, experimental is the crucible of package pain and will always be that way, but it is unnecessary for alot of applications out there, including KDE. I'd rather test application bugs than package dependency bugs in experimental. Thats mental. For example: At the highest level, the packaging process for the xorg packages should remain. Every level higher than that? Not important enough and KDE is just not important, don't let the size of it confuse you, its really not important. It would be nice to see debian sleek again and an end to the insanity of every package that exists on the planet must endure the release cycle rigmarole even if obsolete by the time it comes out of freeze and is burned to 100's of blurays...no one wants 4.8 anymore. Regards. Jules. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: http://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

