I too am frequently frustrated with the lack of bleeding-edge versions
in the most current release of Ubuntu.  However, there are good reasons
for not constantly upgrading packages for a particular distribution.
For one, the effort required to closely track upstream, provide packages
for all releases of Ubuntu, and handle bug reports would be enormous.
In addition, changing versions outside the normal development cycle
would increase the likelihood of introducing critical bugs.  Restricting
package updates to the development version of Ubuntu keeps critical bugs
introduced by new versions from affecting the average user who doesn't
need the bleeding-edge version.

Fortunately, there's usually a way to get the most bleeding-edge version
of a package:  prevu.  This handy little program makes it relatively
easy to backport packages from the development version of Ubuntu to the
current release.  See https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Prevu and
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=268687 for more details.

** Changed in: ubuntu
       Status: New => Invalid

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New versions of packages are not backported
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/179660
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