| From: Giles Orr via talk <[email protected]>

| Long release cycles are a real mixed blessing ...  <sigh>

Thanks for your note on debian 12 / bookworm.

I'm personally interested in debian as a replacement for CentOS.
(GTALUG is  going to have a speaker from Rocky Linux in the next few
months.)

I'm not enculturated in the debian world, but my impression is:

- debian stable is about the same as RHEL.  Very stable, very old.
  Suitable for those who value stability.

- debian testing is pretty reliable.  Perfectly fine on ones desktop.

- debian unstable is more of an adventure

Ideologically, isn't FF ESR a match for debian stable?

If you want firefox, isn't that an indication that you are a candidate
for "testing".

I don't like snaps / flatpacks much.  For reasons that we don't need
to go over.  But your situation might be a great use: you want a
stable OS but need very select exceptions.

==================

We (GTALUG) run a debian stretch server that has fallen out of support.
It falls on me (among others) to kick it forward.
I was under the impression that the automated updating process is more
recent then that.

Is there a royal road to bookworm from stretch?

My guess is that it gets complicated by out-of-distro things that we
have installed.
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