<<< I originally wrote:
I do know I want to stick with "stable" Debian >>>

<<< Someone else wrote:
I my opinion there is no need to do so. Squeeze is close to freeze, soon it 
will became stable. You better run it. Personally I run it on my EeePC and have 
(almost) no problems. Advantage of running testing is newer drivers. Also you 
would not need backports. >>>

<<<Arthur Machlas <arthur.mach...@gmail.com> wrote:
Agreed. For your netbook Squeeze is the best route. If it makes you feel better 
though, aside from the fact that Squeeze will be stable in the next 6 months or 
so (crosses fingers), your old Ubuntu friend is a snapshot of Unstable with 
some patches and bugfixes.>>>
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Thanks a BUNCH for all the responds! If I'm repeating myself, forgive, I'm not 
sure what you've read so far (had some posting issues, now resolved). I'd like 
to explain my desire to use Debian stable so as to get some education here, 
cause I'm confused now. My reason for wanting stable (is it called "Freeze"?) 
was because of a suggestion on the Ubuntu list. 10.04 UNE has problems with 
torrents dropping my wireless connection on my Acer Aspire One. My 1st reaction 
was, how in the WORLD does the Ubuntu *Netbook* Edition (formally "Remix") not 
work on my *netbook*!? On the Ubuntu list, there was talk about the 6-month 
release schedule, talk of Ubuntu being based on "unstable" Debian & that the 
answer might be Debian stable if you don't want problems. This was the 1st time 
I had heard of "stable" & "unstable", I only knew there was "testing", which I 
wanted to avoid. Sounded very reasonable, with a name like "stable" & finding 
out Debian is the SOURCE for
 other distros, I'm thinking stable is what you'd use if you don't want to be a 
"Guinea pig". So I ran right over here. That's what got me here, but now I'm 
wondering if I'm going to go with unstable "Squeeze", what does that offer over 
Ubuntu 9.10 (Remix). 9.10 (unlike 10.04) works well on my Acer Aspire One. I 
remember when Windows 7 testing was being given away & most people I knew 
installed it right away. I wanted no part of "testing" software having no idea 
about this stable vs unstable issue. Hoping to get a good education on this! TIA


      


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