Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 15th Feb 2009 14:24 UTC
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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.
RE[7]: Congratulations are in order
by sbergman27 on Tue 17th Feb 2009 07:58
in reply to "RE[6]: Congratulations are in order"
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.
It really does depend upon one's definition of "bug". Say you are running Debian, you go to YouTube, or whatever, and a Flash video won't play because your version of Gnash is not new enough. Or you try to open an ODF document and it doesn't work because your version of Abiword or Gnumeric is too old. Are those bugs? Many would argue that the software was not intended to play that Video, or open those ODF files, so they are not bugs, but simply a lack of particular features. My users would call them a bugs. And I would be hard-pressed to dispute them.
Note that I am not criticizing ODF, here. It's not that ODF is a moving target, but that ODF support in Abiword and Gnunmeric are incomplete "works in progress" at this time. And we all know what a "work in progress" Gnash is.
Edited 2009-02-17 08:03 UTC







Member since:
2008-07-15
All of it bug-free? All of it, every single possible usage scenario, with every conceivable combination of hardware and software? I highly doubt it. It may be mostly bug-free, but nothing is ever 100%, completely, utterly bug-free. Never. Never has been, never will be.