> Von: "Alberto Ruiz" <[email protected]>

> In the meantime, even if less than ideal, we have to cope with the fact
> that it's distros who distribute Evolution.

That actually _is_ the ideal way.

Someone writes a nice programme. Someone else packages it for their 
distribution A and again somebody else for distribution B.

Instead of running around the internet and chasing multiple download pages you 
do a simple central update with the for your distribution typical tools to get 
a new version.

Occasionally a distribution will hang behind, occasionally a distribution will 
ignore a new release and very occasionally a distribution will make a conscious 
choice of not implementing an update. A user can then either choose to live 
with these facts, change distribution or (if they are technically able) create 
their own updated version from sources.

My current main laptop has 2500 programme packages installed. I would think 
this is fairly norm. For the vast majority (2498 packages to be exact) I am not 
in the slightest interested to have the most bang up to date version. For the 
two remaining ones - I am a contributing developer, so I compile them from 
source.

Unless you produce something very special or something in closed source, you 
would be a fool to replicate half heartedly and half arsedly the often 
considerably well thought through infrastructure of a major distribution.

And unless you are desperately waiting for a brand new feature/bug fix from a 
specific package there is no reason whatsoever not to wait for your own 
distribution to update itself. Which it will do at some point. Painlessly and 
unnoticably, usually.

Peter
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