On Sat, 2004-04-10 at 16:00, Paul Patrick Carpio Prantilla wrote: > Hello All, > > I was wondering if there are people here who use debian woody on > computers directly connected to the internet...but at the same time > can't resist backporting or installing a "few packages" from the > unstable branch. The point is, I'd like a system (I wouldn't really call > this a server though btw) that's directly connected to the net to be as > stable as possible, but isn't stuck with old packages like > xfree86(ver<4.3), gnome 1.4, and so forth. I'd also like it to have some > goodies only available from unstable such as wireless-extensions,bluez > packages,tvtime,etc. This is because it's also used for desktop > activities especially when not online.
What are you going to use the machine for? > > Now, while I do use sid on other computers, can anyone give me insights > on whether installing sid on the said sytem is a good idea? Or should I > just stick with backports? I'm trying to balance security, stablity and > functionality together. I've gotten numerous mixed reactions on this in > linux/debian chat channels, so I was thinking I'd post the topic here. Go with woody if you want security AND stability. > > Finally, I'd also like to ask what kind of setups fellow debian users > here have. Does anyone of you actually still use woody? I personally > have gnome 2.2, kde 3.2 on my woody. The problem is, trying to make them > coexist with one another has broken a few other packages. For packages > that just aren't available for woody, I try to compile from source after > hunting down compatible versions if they exist (a very time-consuming > task I might add). Thus I'm now seriously contemplating on whether I > should just stop the madness and go full-blown sid, while simply > version-pinning the packages I think are ok enough for me. full-blown sid and pinning sounds sane ;) FWIW, I'm running sid. Things break, but most of the time fixable. Cheers, -- Jan Alonzo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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