Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 15th Feb 2009 14:24 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 349347
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[5]: Congratulations are in order
by sbergman27 on Mon 16th Feb 2009 21:26
in reply to "RE[4]: Congratulations are in order"
Not many distros, however, manage to offer over 23,000 packages, 5 DVDs, supporting 12 architectures! (And everything stable and bug-free).
Your avatar is simply unfair. How can I even presume to stand up to Spock in his prime, in "The Undiscovered Country"?
I've no choice but to concede, darn it! ;-)
RE[6]: Congratulations are in order
by Anonymous Penguin on Mon 16th Feb 2009 21:29
in reply to "RE[5]: Congratulations are in order"
"Not many distros, however, manage to offer over 23,000 packages, 5 DVDs, supporting 12 architectures! (And everything stable and bug-free).
Your avatar is simply unfair. How can I even presume to stand up to Spock in his prime, in "The Undiscovered Country"?
I've no choice but to concede, darn it! ;-) "
LOL!
RE[5]: Congratulations are in order
by darknexus on Tue 17th Feb 2009 01:45
in reply to "RE[4]: Congratulations are in order"
RE[6]: Congratulations are in order
by Anonymous Penguin on Tue 17th Feb 2009 07:28
in reply to "RE[5]: Congratulations are in order"
Debian releases when the count of release-critical bugs is zero. Thus not your definition of bug-free.
However my experience of comparing Debian to other distros over the years (and mind you, Debian is not the only one I like), is that a Debian release is indeed bug-free for any practical purpose.





Member since:
2005-07-06
Not many distros, however, manage to offer over 23,000 packages, 5 DVDs, supporting 12 architectures! (And everything stable and bug-free).