Posted April 15, 2021

hummer010
Crazy Penguin
Registered: Dec 2012
From Canada
Posted April 15, 2021



Now, one of the common complaints about Arch is that those major changes often break things. I've been lucky, I guess. In the last 9 years, my system has been rendered non-booting twice. Both times it was related to the nVidia proprietary driver and kernel modules. Both times, it was easy to fix using a chroot from an Arch installer stick. My current system is all AMD, so I don't need proprietary drivers for graphics.
Registered: Jan 2010
From Ireland
Posted April 15, 2021

But that 2012 Arch is very different from 2021 Arch. As different as say 2012 Ubuntu vs 2021 Ubuntu. Those small changes took place every new version.


I'd rather keep exactly the same version of OS, even if it means not having an up to date version of many things (except security updates and the like), then after a few years just do a complete overhaul. So if I use a rolling release when a major change takes places I either say yes and change Package A to B (in which case I no longer have the lack-of-change that I want), or choose no, in which case I might as well use LTS.
Post edited April 16, 2021 by ZFR

vv221
./play.it developer
Registered: Dec 2012
From France
Posted April 16, 2021

Having our software packaged in Debian repositories means that Debian users are not going to send us bug reports. They will send them to Debian bugs tracker instead, where the maintainer for our software can do some triage before forwarding to us only what is relevant.

hummer010
Crazy Penguin
Registered: Dec 2012
From Canada
Posted April 16, 2021




I'd rather keep exactly the same version of OS, the same immature college-John, even if it means not having an up to date version of many things (except security updates and the like), then after a few years just do a complete overhaul. So if I use a rolling release when a major change takes places I either say yes and change Package A to B (in which case I no longer have the lack-of-change that I want), or choose no, in which case I might as well use LTS.
You are absolutely correct, it is drastically different than it was in 2012. I would be surprised if there is a single package that has been updated.
This just reiterates that we're looking for different things. You'd like to keep the same version of the OS. I don't want to have to go through an upgrade or reinstall process. That's the beauty of Linux - there's an option for everyone.