On Sun, Aug 24, 2003 at 02:01:47PM -0400, stan wrote: > On Sun, Aug 24, 2003 at 05:27:26PM +0100, Colin Watson wrote: > > If it's filed in the bug tracking system, at the moment you just have to > > look at the bug every so often, although there's some work outstanding > > on letting you subscribe to bugs. > > > > If it's not, then you just have to look every so often. In the case of > > GNOME, reading the debian-gtk-gnome mailing list would probably be your > > best bet, if you aren't prepared to keep a very close eye on the state > > of testing (which I try to do for other reasons). > > Is sound still also broken in testing?
[Please don't send me private copies of list mail. I read the list.] I don't know the problem you're referring to, so I have no idea ... > And a followup question, if I want to install a new system, what should I > do, just install stable, and accept that it will not be nearly as current > as my machines which have been tracking testing for a while? That depends what you're looking for. My server runs stable; my laptop (which is also my main development machine) runs unstable; my workstation at work ran stable up until late last week, and now runs testing because I wanted mozilla-firebird with anti-aliased fonts. Right now, systems running testing are actually substantially out of date with respect to unstable, due to problems holding up chunks of GNOME 2 and all of KDE 3, and more recently problems with glibc 2.3.2. Once the latter is resolved I expect the former two to follow reasonably soon. Cheers, -- Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]