OK, stuff happens. I recovered my laptop and will recover my server that
is being configured for production. While I did not expect bugs that
severe, I was warned and recovery was not that difficult. No biggie.

Here's three different conclusions:

1) R o o t   P a s s w o r d

What is apparent to me, is that many system recovery features do require
having a valid unix root password.

I think that it is highly precarious to leave users unable to "just
screw that fancy stuff and logon as root" as they would be unable to
perform various system recovery functions if that is so. (example, /home
directory lost)

After any Ubuntu install, my FIRST command is always

  sudo passwd root

I think that a suitable installation action would be to "set root
password to the first user password". (my root password is not the same)

2) M a i l i n g  L i s t

I would personally like to subscribe to a "hardy-alerts" mailing list
and get notified of such things as they occur. If such a list exists, I
would like to subscribe to it, if not, I would like to see it. Not for
minor bugs, but for showstopper bugs.

3) R e g r e s s i o n   T e s t i n g

I write regression tests for anything that I program at work. I think
that in the case of Ubuntu, it is possible to come up with an automated
test that involves, at the very least, a successful multiuser boot, user
able to login, ssh working, and the "system update drivetrain" working
as well. A minimum system config that does not leave its users stranded.
Such a test would be even more useful for production stage. If anyone
needs help here, I could dedicate some time to it.

-- 
REGRESSION: glibc 2.7-9ubuntu1 NSS module broken due to toolchain changes
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/201673
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