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- <li><em>date</em>: Wed Jun 1 22:56:41 2005</li>
- <li><em>from</em>: barry at bytemason.org (Barry Hawkins)</li>
- <li><em>in-reply-to</em>: <[email protected]></li>
- <li><em>references</em>: <<a href="msg00045.html">[email protected]</a>> <[email protected]></li>
- <li><em>subject</em>: [ale] Debian 3.0 as a server platform?</li>
No one who chooses to run Debian stable as their desktop install should
complain about package availability and updates, any more than they
should complain about not being able to run gPhoto on RHEL or SLES with
their new USB-capable digital camera.
Here's why:
Think of the three Debian releases[0] this way:
Stable - rock solid, not prone to change much except for security
updates; great for servers like the question originally posted here.
Testing - the candidate for the next stable, as up to date as any other
distro, except for certain areas where the free software guidelines and
Debian's policies against packaging precompiled binaries in the source
packages and the like impede the more rapid pace of, say, Fedora or the
others. See "what is testing?"[1] and "how it becomes stable"[2] in
the Debian FAQ for more.
Unstable - where newly-developed and newly-introduced packages make their
main debut. if you blindly update any and all software ignoring any dependency
warnings, you may get yourself in a fix here.
I run the "unstable" release on my PowerBook G4 daily as my main machine,
and I seldom have issues. The issues I have had usually iron out with the
next package upload. I should add that I use aptitude and actually examine
the effects of upgrading and installing packages before doing so, which
greatly enhances your experience over blindly running `apt-get install`.
Also, there are some people for whom Debian will never be a fit, and I
don't see it trying to become all things to all people, even with the
changes to our release schedules and so forth. Debian is still run by
volunteers, still strongly committed to free software, and committed to
supporting a variety of architectures. If none of the above matters to
you, then it could be that one of the more commercial distros that is
focused on x86 would be a better choice.
[0] - <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.debian.org/releases/">http://www.debian.org/releases/</a>
[1] - <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/ch-ftparchives#s-testing">http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/ch-ftparchives#s-testing</a>
[2] - <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/ch-ftparchives#s-frozen">http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/ch-ftparchives#s-frozen</a>
Regards,
--
Barry Hawkins
All Things Computed
site: www.alltc.com
weblog: www.yepthatsme.com
Registered Linux User #368650
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<li><strong><a name="00070" href="msg00070.html">[ale] Debian 3.0 as a server platform?</a></strong>
<ul><li><em>From:</em> kaboom at oobleck.net (Chris Ricker)</li></ul></li>
<li><strong><a name="00072" href="msg00072.html">[ale] Debian 3.0 as a server platform?</a></strong>
<ul><li><em>From:</em> Robert.L.Harris at rdlg.net (Robert L. Harris)</li></ul></li>
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<li><strong><a name="00045" href="msg00045.html">[ale] Debian 3.0 as a server platform?</a></strong>
<ul><li><em>From:</em> jb at sourceillustrated.com (John Wells)</li></ul></li>
<li><strong><a name="00049" href="msg00049.html">[ale] Debian 3.0 as a server platform?</a></strong>
<ul><li><em>From:</em> fishy at fishynet.net (Thomas Holmquist)</li></ul></li>
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