On Thu, 2018-08-02 at 13:32 +1200, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote: > On 02/08/18 13:05, Default User wrote: > > So, if apt-get is for non-trivial upgrades, then why not for daily > > use?
In my experience, major upgrades using aptitude sometimes get seriously bogged down resolving dependencies, whereas apt-get and apt generally run smoothly. I also have found it generally works better to do apt-get upgrade followed by apt-get dist-upgrade rather than trying to do it all in one step, and that with rare exceptions, it all comes out right in the end, although there occasionally are oopses that require a bit of additional effort. If there are difference between apt-get and apt other than some of the command names, I have not noticed them, and now generally use apt. Tom Dial > I use it daily and for trivial upgrades. > > > Not efficient to have multiple choices. Debian, please choose one > > and > > deprecate the others. > > Debian is all about multiple choices. Debian tries to include > everything > that meets the DFSG, from choice of init system, filesystems, > servers, > to desktop. Debian is inclusive. > > Choice reduces happiness: > https://www.ted.com/talks/dan_gilbert_asks_why_are_we_happy > > For enhanced new-user happiness, other distributions provide more > curated selections. Once users have become accustomed to a curated > subset, the breadth and flexibility of Debian makes it easy to > reproduce > a selection found in a more limited distribution. > > > I patiently await your hate mail. > > You did not mention systemd; no hate mail for you! ;-) > > Kind regards, >