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Debian Lenny frozen

Debian Lenny frozen

Posted Jul 28, 2008 23:33 UTC (Mon) by drag (subscriber, #31333)
In reply to: Debian Lenny frozen by pphaneuf
Parent article: Debian Lenny frozen

Waiting a little bit for a major release isn't a good idea because there are lots of major
releases all the time for lots of different projects.

Each major release is almost always delayed. Each major release isn't going to work perfectly
when it hits the public so will need some maturing time.


For example:
> Does anything seriously depend on OpenOffice.org, for example?

_I_do_. 

Lets assume for a second that I have to deal with a office that depends on OO.org as part of
it's workflow.

This means I have documentation I have to maintain. This means that scripts and macros and
databases and all sorts of little things that I and dozens of other people have built up
around OO.org. Something like MS Office or OO.org isn't just for making spreadsheets or
editing word documents. They are programming environments in their own rights and are used for
all sorts of important office tasks and form the basis for important applications.

This, our personal time and effort, is more important then, say, improved Word compatibility.
If I need word compatibility it's not difficult to have a machine somewhere running Windows
with the latest version of OO.org so that I can test document conversions with MS Office.

As you can imagine delaying a release of a OS in order to shove some new version of OO.org
with a whole new sets of bugs and invalidating at least a portion of the documentation I've
made up as well as macros and other things that people have made is not a attractive concept.

------------------------------


If you want a newer version of OO.org stuck in Lenny it's not a big deal to do yourself.

I don't like apt-pinning because if you do that for something that lots of dependencies it's
easy to pull in a bunch of files from a newer release basically ruining the point of having a
stable release in the first place.

I like things like Backports.org and I like using deb-src and recompiling packages from newer
systems for older systems. 

This way the stability of the entire OS can be maintained by Debian while I can have my little
niggling task-specific 'must have' without disrupting it for everybody else.

--------------------


Of course it would be nice when the average Linux distribution person or programmer realizes
the significant advantages of binary distribution from upstream and put effort into making it
work better.


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